Code Black (2015) s02e08 Episode Script

1.0 Bodies

1 [Indistinct conversations.]
So I spoke to Dr.
Rogers this morning.
He was very happy with your progress.
I-I passed all the neuro exams.
I feel good physically.
And I've run out of shows to binge watch.
Mm.
Mike, I think you need more time.
- You're still recovering - You're wrong.
No, I'm not.
But it's not up to me.
The board your father, in particular, has decided you're ready.
- So here are the ground rules.
- Ground rules? Take it slow.
No Center Stage, no major traumas.
You'll act in a supervisory role only.
And we'll re-evaluate in a few weeks.
[Sighs.]
Okay.
I can handle that.
- Welcome back, Dr.
Leighton.
- [Laughs.]
That's what he said? You're back? Well, I'm not gonna be running the residency program, but I'm back at work.
[Pills rattle.]
What? Neurontin, amitryptyline.
Still having those headaches and nerve pain? I was in a coma for three months.
I take Topamax, too.
Relax, I got this.
All right.
Okay, come on.
Let's do this! Woman over radio: Angels Base, 12 ambulances en route.
14 patients, all unconscious.
5 D.
O.
A.
, cause unknown.
[Sirens wailing.]
[Indistinct conversations, radio chatter.]
We found him like this in a house.
Five D.
O.
A.
, two of ours passed out on the scene.
- Maybe carbon monoxide? - Maybe.
Center Stage for him, please, and this one, too.
And any other criticals, the rest I want - Was there any drug paraphernalia? - None.
Leanne: I wanna know what we've got here.
Bring it in here, guys.
Bring it in here.
[Monitor beeping erratically.]
Man: Arterial pumper from a scalp lac.
Looked like this when he tumbled down some stairs when he lost consciousness.
Uh, what are those? No clue.
They're all wearing them.
Rest of their personal effects are in here.
I got those.
What do we got?! I don't know.
That's what we're trying to figure out.
All right, let's get ready for a transfer.
- On my count.
One, two, three.
- [Man grunting.]
[Monitor beeping rapidly.]
This patient's in respiratory distress.
Okay, you need to intubate, Dr.
Dixon.
- Dr.
Rorish.
- Yes? You've got Paul Wentworth, - 42 years old from Ohio.
- Got it.
I can't intubate.
His airway's swelling up.
You'll need to use a small E.
T.
tube.
- Risa, get him a 6-0.
- Yes, Doctor.
Dr.
Willis, you've got Charlie Loffredo, 21, from Missouri.
Ready with the 4-0 Prolene.
Gonna need a C.
T.
scan when I'm done.
We need pacer pads over here.
Girl is Dana Albright, 19, from Colorado.
You sure you didn't find these guys on a tour bus? B.
P.
and heart rate are crashing.
I'll start a dopamine drip.
One, two, three.
- [Gagging.]
- He's vomiting.
I need suction and Zofran, mama.
- Let's turn him.
- Jesse: Here you go.
Dr.
Rorish, this one's in respiratory distress, too.
Okay, put her over there by the counter.
- Dr.
Leighton, can you get on that? - Yeah.
[Indistinct conversations.]
[Man continues grunting.]
Why is he still seizing? Those meds should be kicking in by now.
Yeah, they should.
Willis? Got any ideas? Could be sarin gas.
It's the same symptoms.
Elliot: I still can't get the tube in.
Mike: Hey, his throat's too swollen to intubate.
He needs to be criked.
Okay.
- [Emergency radio chatter.]
- Watch it.
This patient's gonna code.
[Monitor beeping erratically.]
- [Groans.]
- Risa: Oh! Oh! - Got a man down over here.
- Will: Somebody help him.
- Oh, God! - Leanne: Elliot is down, too.
[Indistinct conversations.]
[Monitor beeping rapidly.]
Jesse: Gurney! [Voice echoing.]
What the hell's going on? It's not a gas.
It's on them.
- It's in their clothing.
- It's a cholinergic toxidrome.
Okay, everybody, listen up! We need to get all these patients outside right now.
Quickly, but carefully.
And nobody touch them until decon.
Go, go, go, go! When we get 'em out, cut the clothes off all of them.
Bring as much atropine as you can get.
Can we clear a room in the hallway?! Go, go, go! Go! Clear it out, clear it out, clear it out.
Right here, right here.
Bring 'em in, bring 'em down! Let's go! [Clank.]
Will: Cut all their clothing off.
[Man continues grunting.]
Still seizing! Leanne: Okay, atropine should start working any minute now.
Noa: What the hell? Are you kidding me? Guys, the bracelets are connected to them.
What do you mean "connected"? Do not remove the bracelets! We need an X-ray of that.
What's going on? Where am I? Where's Dana? Dana! Dana! Charlie! I'm here! - I'm over here! - Stay calm.
Dana, don't let them do anything! Don't let them treat you! [Grunting.]
He knocked off his I.
V.
while seizing.
I can't get access for the atropine.
You want a new line? No time.
Just hold him down.
Come on, buddy, stay down! - Easy! - Push it! [Yells.]
Has anyone seen my wife? Susan! Susan? Susan! I'm sorry.
She died on the scene.
She made it.
She she made it! [Laughing.]
She's made it! Seems like they're wired to median nerve fibers of the wrist.
What are they for? Did anyone succeed besides my wife? Five other people have died, if that's what you mean by success.
What are those bracelets for? Paul, listen to me, the atropine has stabilized you, but it is going to wear off.
We don't know what we're treating, and and it could get much, much worse.
At least tell us what toxin you used.
[Man speaking indistinctly over P.
A.
.]
[Loudly.]
I am exercising my right to refuse treatment.
All: I am exercising my right to refuse treatment.
Nothing creepy about that.
You are not to remove the bracelet from my wrist or provide me with any medical care.
All: You are not to remove the bracelet from my wrist, or provide me with any medical care.
I see you've succeeded in poisoning their minds as well.
Poisoning? No.
We're transcending.
Transcending? Transcending what? Our 1.
0 bodies.
We're going to live forever.
- Sounds exhausting.
- [Laughs.]
We should separate him from his flock.
- Agreed.
- I don't have a flock.
It's not a religion.
It's science.
Science.
Right.
Okay, let's wheel him into a private room.
You're not part of all this? Can I see Dana? A couple questions first.
What did he use? Was it a liquid? Was it a gas? Did it smell? Um, I think he said he was gonna use some kind of fertilizer.
I don't know what.
And, um, horse shampoo? Those are both organophosphates.
He made a homemade pesticide.
- We're gonna need 2-P.
A.
M.
- Yeah.
A lot of it.
Got it.
[Telephone ringing in distance.]
What about the bracelet? Paul is a futurist.
A futurist.
And a neurosurgeon and a biomedical engineer.
He's a genius, and he's also insane.
And the bracelet? He thinks he found a way to upload our consciousness to a super computer.
The bracelet's wired into our central nervous system.
And at the moment of death, it's supposed to transfer our spirit into a virtual world where we await our next bodies.
And you believe that.
It was all theoretical in the beginning.
I didn't think we'd really go through with it.
- But you did go through with it.
- No.
Um Yeah.
I, uh I-I mean, I stopped.
I called 9-1-1.
And I saw Dana fall to the floor.
And he said we wouldn't be scared, but I was.
I was scared.
I dragged her outside.
I-I don't remember anything after that.
Is Dana your girlfriend? [Whispers.]
Oh, my God.
What did we do? You're a shrink.
Is it that obvious? Dana, can you tell me what led you to the Children of Elysian? Don't talk to her, Dana.
It's not a secret for me.
[Wheezing inhale.]
There's nothing she can say.
If it's not a secret, then how did a girl like you end up here? I needed an answer.
[Wheezing inhale.]
- and nobody else had one.
- And Paul had the answer.
He'd been asking the same question.
[Wheezing inhale.]
If we can use technology to advance ourselves in life [Wheezing inhale.]
why can't we use it to advance ourselves in death? [Wheezing inhale.]
- [Monitor beeping erratically.]
- Dana? I need help over here! Jesse: Pulse ox is down to 72.
Pressure's 50 over 35.
Dana? Can you hear me? You can't touch her.
Her atropine dose is wearing off.
She needs 2-P.
A.
M.
She said she doesn't want treatment.
- Nurse, shut the curtain.
- I'm witnessing you, Dana.
I'm here.
Be brave.
- Did she refuse treatment? - Yes.
They all did.
- So what are you doing? - She seem of sound mind to you? Yes, she was very clear and deliberate to me.
So joining a cult, soldering wires to your nervous system, drowning in poison is evidence of clear thinking? Jesse: I have got an ampule of 2-P.
A.
M.
right here.
No treatment.
Okay, we need to discuss this.
We discuss this any more, she's gonna be dead.
You're violating her rights! Dr.
Willis, she refused treatment.
She's hypoxic.
She's getting no oxygen to her brain.
- She can't make a decision.
- Guys, she's crashing.
[Monitor beeping rapidly.]
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
Beyond the moral implications, there are also legal ones.
These people joined a cult to e-mail themselves into the future.
Is that not the definition of insanity? - No, actually.
It is not.
- I agree with Ethan.
I don't think they're capable of making the choice to refuse care.
Atropine is temporary.
We don't have a lot of time to weigh it.
Eventually, the damage is gonna be irreversible and the 2-P.
A.
M.
isn't gonna work.
Some of these people may be there now.
Paul Wentworth is a doctor.
He calls them all his patients.
And we might not like him or his theories but I've heard enough.
We're treating them.
Everyone gets 2-P.
A.
M.
immediately.
[Sighs.]
- [Door opens.]
[Indistinct conversations.]
Pretty good.
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
Yes! They had them! Yes! Thank you.
You know, for a guy who dropped like a hot brick, it's a interesting choice.
You know, everyone has their vices when they get nervous or freaked out.
For some, it's a treadmill.
You know, some, it's meditation.
Others, it's Kanye.
- It's never Kanye.
- Mnh-mnh.
No, for you it's just Cheese Puffs.
Hey, is Eloise all right? I heard that she, uh, hit her head.
Yeah, she's okay.
Right there.
You crushing on my nurse, sugar bear? I'm just concerned, okay? Medically.
- Mm-hmm.
- Medically.
Guys.
Got a lot of patients who need doctors.
Grab a chart and save some lives.
You back running the program now? - No, just back to kicking your ass.
- Oof.
[Indistinct conversations.]
[Telephone rings.]
Thought I'd take you to dinner Linda, what are you doing? Shouldn't you be back east by now? I thought we could get to know each other better.
Better? [Scoffs.]
Linda, I don't know you at all.
Let's fix that.
Okay, look, um you seem nice enough.
It's just, I really don't have time in my life for Family? You're not my family.
Okay? You're my dad's girlfriend, and now he's dead.
Look, I'm sorry.
I've got patients.
I gotta go.
Mario, I'll be in town for a while.
Call me? [Woman voice echoes indistinctly.]
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
[Groaning.]
[French accent.]
He shouldn't have been climbing a tree.
I turned my back for one second.
- It's broken, isn't it? - Yep.
- Boy: [Strained voice.]
It doesn't hurt.
- [Chuckles.]
That's the adrenaline talking, bud.
I'll call your mom again, Keigan.
His mother is out of town.
She's going to kill me.
Hey, kids fall.
Don't be so hard on yourself.
He's tachypneic.
[Scoffs.]
Straight to voicemail.
Angus: Deep breath for me, Keigan.
That's it, and then another.
Jesse, that's a possible rib fracture.
Let's get him a chest X-ray.
I wanna see his lungs.
You got it.
Yeah, and pull up 10 of lido.
Keigan, I'm gonna numb your wrist so we can fix it, okay, bud? You're not gonna feel a thing, I promise.
[Monitor beeping erratically.]
Hey, hey, hey.
We don't need to do a hematoma block.
- Let's just sedate him.
- No, it's fine.
He's got a distal radius fracture.
Should reduce easily.
Let me, um [Grunts.]
Damn it.
Uh Jesse, how you feel about sedating him? 2 milligrams per kilogram of ketamine.
Deep breath.
That's it.
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
You can't stop me, you know.
Why do you wanna kill yourself so badly? I'm not killing myself.
Then explain it to me.
You wouldn't understand.
Friend of yours wanted to say hi.
Dana.
How how could you? - I couldn't watch you die.
- I wasn't dying! Sam is waiting for me, and you took that away! Sam? Curiouser and curiouser.
Come on, Dana.
He's not waiting for you.
There's nothing there but death.
And you know this how? They teach you about quantum physics at vocational school? [Telephone ringing in distance.]
- This isn't you, Dana.
- How would you know?! You don't know anything about me! This wasn't one of our best plans.
I know I love you, and I know you love me, too.
- I know you do.
- [Laughs.]
Love you? You're insane.
How many times do I have to tell you this, Charlie? - [Coughing.]
- I'm married! That's what this whole thing is about, and you know it.
[Gags.]
Oh, my God.
- Someone help him! - [Coughing.]
All right, let's get him back to his bed.
- Need a wheelchair.
- [Coughing.]
If you want me to go, I will, but only 'cause I can't watch you hurt yourself anymore.
Dana, what did you mean, that that's what this is all about? My husband is waiting for me in Elysian.
And where is this Elysian? It's a virtual world that Paul created.
A place where where we can be together.
Aha.
Thank you.
[Siren wails.]
[Indistinct conversations.]
What are you looking for, sweetheart? A vein? Well, they're all sclerosed.
If you mean I've been poked within an inch of my life by my rad oncologist? Then, yes.
Ashley, it's Barbara.
Obviously, I'm not making the meeting.
Something came up.
- I'm sorry.
- There.
Got it in.
I'm at the hospital.
I uh, broke my ankle.
Anyway, we'll have to reschedule.
Uh-huh.
[Cellphone beeps.]
Stepdaughter.
I'm trying to avoid her sympathy.
Well, the C.
T.
should tell us for sure if it's a bowel obstruction.
They're pretty typical in colon cancer patients.
Yes, if you could read, you would see on my chart, - I've had three.
- Hmm.
Okay, so, um, we'll be back when Radiology's ready for you.
- Can't wait for that.
- How long you think? Noa: Could be a couple hours.
[Sighs heavily.]
Is there anyone else you want us to call for you? No.
Nobody wants to deal with this.
Trust me.
[Telephone rings in distance.]
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
You think I'm crazy, don't you? I think you did a terrible thing.
You and I are exactly the same.
We're both doctors.
When you learned about heaven, did you think it was insane? I did.
But how do you know that this isn't what God meant? Just like he guided Moses to Mount Sinai or Noah to the Ark, how do you know he didn't guide me to Elysian? So you're a prophet? Those are your words, not mine.
Your heaven what is it like? There's no more guilt.
There's no more grief.
There's no more regret.
There's no more pain.
It's simply not in the program.
People like you have been promising to magically alleviate pain since the beginning of time.
- Let's talk about your pain.
- Let's not.
It's obvious.
It's your albatross.
You don't have to bring it with you to Elysian.
Your blood pressure is climbing.
- Do you have hypertension? - I see you.
What do you see, Paul? [Beeping quickens.]
His blood pressure's skyrocketing.
- His heart rate, too.
- Paul.
- Oh! Get more Ativan.
- He's seizing.
I got it.
Oh! [Monitor beeping rapidly.]
Okay, here we go.
[Monitor beeping steadily .]
Jesse: Okay.
All right.
The seizure dislocated his shoulder.
Okay, let me give you a hand with that.
[Bones snap.]
That was way too easy.
Your arm doesn't get loose like that after just one seizure.
Maybe his problems are bigger than the poison.
[Indistinct radio chatter.]
[Vomits.]
[Chuckles, sniffs.]
[Door opens, closes.]
So Dana's alive? - Is she okay? - She's stable.
When was the last time you heard from your daughter? About six months ago.
She sent us a note to tell us Sam died.
His poor mother.
When we tried to come to the compound, we were turned away.
She wouldn't even talk to us.
Can you back up just a little bit? Sam grew up down the street from us.
They were inseparable.
From the time they were 16, they knew they were gonna get married as soon as they were legal.
And then he was diagnosed.
Leukemia.
He was given a year to live.
They started looking into alternative therapies.
Traveling from one quack to another.
- Of course, none of it worked.
- And then she heard about Paul and the Children of Elysian.
He told them he couldn't cure Sam's body, but he could free him of it.
And better yet, Dana could join him.
So she thinks she's gonna see Sam in this Elysian.
We didn't raise her this way.
I don't know how my baby let that monster hypnotize her.
Maybe you could file for guardianship.
But you may not get it.
Why not? She's clearly sick.
Because the court may not deem her incompetent.
But they would if you recommended it.
Can we see her? I'm sorry.
She's refused.
[Crying.]
[Indistinct conversations.]
- [Door closes.]
- I am a little curious as to why you seem to be on the wrong side of this.
I'm not trying to be.
But I also know that when it comes to the mind, people can't be forced to heal.
They have to choose it for themselves.
[Door opens.]
[Door closes.]
Look at it.
You know how to read a C.
T.
? - So everything I've seen - You haven't seen anything.
The seizures will stop once we remove the tumor, as will the visions.
[Scoffs.]
That's funny.
I'm a neurosurgeon and it never occurred to me.
Although, it makes perfect sense.
I need to tell them the truth.
They deserve to know.
[Click.]
Oh.
I thought the pain meds were supposed to help.
Still having abdominal pain? Oh, like a scene from "Alien.
" No rigidity, but your white count's very high - and your temperature - [Curtain rings swoosh.]
Where's the cast? So your broken ankle's actually what? That brow lift you always wanted? This is a county hospital, Ashley.
That Brown education really was a waste - wasn't it? - Don't.
Not today.
Dad's estate has taken over a year to settle.
- Oh, God forbid, you're gonna have - We're finally gonna be done, - no money for the weekend.
- and you blow off the meeting.
This isn't about the money, Barbara, and you know it! I want my parents' house.
- It's all that I have left of them.
- Yes, well, all of my stuff is in it right now, because your father left it to me.
You were a guest in that house.
- For 20 years? - Yes.
Actually, your stepmother's pretty sick, so Mario: So [clears throat.]
why don't you step outside while we finish up our work, huh? Just please get her out.
[Indistinct conversations.]
Everyone listen.
The doctors have told me the truth.
I have a tumor.
It's been giving me seizures and it explains my visions of Elysian.
My tumor it was another gift from God.
All right, that's enough.
- He gave me what I needed - [Chuckles.]
- to find the path to the future.
- Woman: Preach on! - Unbelievable.
- [speaks indistinctly.]
to fulfill his highest aspirations.
- Get him out of here - That there is no more grief, - no more guilt.
- Let's go, let's go.
- No more regret, no more pain.
- We won't give up.
- I love you all.
- We love you, Paul! See you in Elysian! Paul: I will see you in Elysian.
[Applause.]
- [Monitor beeping rapidly.]
- [Grunting.]
His pulse ox is at 75.
What's wrong with him? Help him! He's retracting.
Could be a complication of a rib fracture.
- Put him on a non-rebreather.
- No, his chest X-ray was normal.
- Uh - Woman: It's going to be fine, yes.
No, it's not.
He's got a pneumo on the left side.
- Let me see that.
- I got it.
How could I miss that? Woman: Is he going to be okay? Yeah, we just need to put a tube in his chest so he can breathe.
Prep a chest tube.
Dr.
Leighton, get that chest tube.
Yeah.
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
[Monitor beeping erratically.]
[Switch clicks, defibrillator whining.]
[Beep.]
I am ready.
[Machine whirs.]
I am brave.
- [Pads thunk.]
- [Gasps.]
[Staggered breathing.]
Okay, here we go.
Do you hear that stridor? That's weird, even for a pneumo.
Step back, Dr.
Leighton.
- Is he going to be okay? - Yeah, he's gonna be fine.
Then one more Scalpel, please.
Thank you.
- Mike, just listen.
- Angus.
Step back.
Okay, Keigan, you're gonna feel a little pressure.
[Exhales.]
Okay.
[Exhales sharply.]
- Okay.
- Wait, Mike.
Stop! What? This isn't his X-ray.
That's not Keigan's X-ray.
You grabbed the wrong one.
[Distorted voice.]
His airway's closing.
I need 1 of epi and 125 of Solumedrol now.
He's got a rash.
His pharynx is swollen.
This is anaphylaxis.
What's happening? Hang in there, pal.
Hang in there.
- Push it.
- Okay.
Okay, his stridor's subsiding.
His pulse ox is coming up.
That's it.
That's it.
- There you go, pal.
- I [Exhales.]
Keigan's gonna be fine.
We're going to need to, uh, - keep him for a few more hours, though.
- Okay.
[Telephone ringing in distance.]
Yeah.
Wait, hang on a second.
Excuse me.
Hey.
Where you going? - I need to see him.
- No.
Okay, please? He took away my daughter.
- I understand.
- I need him to explain it to me.
I need to understand how this happened.
Listen to me.
He can't do anything for you.
You gotta focus on your daughter.
No! Jesse! [Curtain rings swoosh.]
No, no, no, no, no, no, no! - Here! Here! - We gotta cut him down! Gary: No, you are not dying.
Not now.
Jesse: Okay.
Okay, let him down.
You are not dying, not now! No Elysian valley for you, you sick bastard! Noa: How are you doing now, Barbara? Barbara: The pain is getting [groans.]
- [Click.]
- Oh, God.
[Sighs.]
Are you still here? You're in pain? Tell me what's wrong with you.
My therapist has built four houses thanks to me, - trying to answer that question.
- Barbara.
Colon cancer.
How long have you known? - About a year.
- And you never called.
It's not like you called either.
- I don't have cancer.
- [Sighs.]
- How long did dad have Alzheimer's? - Oh, God.
- Two years before you told me? - I didn't know it was Alzheimer's.
Of course you did.
You shut down when things go bad.
You just pretend they're not there.
That's what I was to you just something else to avoid.
I'm the avoider? I was the one there with him day after day as he kept slipping further and further away.
I fed him, I bathed him, and I never got so much as a thank you.
That's not fair.
I wanted to be there, but you were always so hostile.
You hated me before I even stepped through the front door of that house.
Why would I hate you? Because I wasn't your mother.
[Monitor beeping steadily.]
Barbara? [Monitor beeping rapidly.]
Barbara! - She's going into shock.
- Barbara! Rigid abdomen.
She must have a perforated colon.
Okay, let's start a high line now.
Call the O.
R.
and clear the C.
T.
scanner.
Is she gonna be okay? [Monitor beeping steadily.]
Find a needle.
I'm sorry, Barbara.
[Groans.]
She's hot.
It's not perforation, it's typhlitis.
Start her on pressors.
Can I ask you a question? Did you ever grieve for your husband Sam? Why would I grieve? He's not dead.
Right.
I wanna show you something.
Oh.
I see.
You think I'm afraid to see her.
Sophia is home now.
She made it.
I'll be seeing her soon.
This isn't Sophia.
[Voice breaks.]
Charlie? Dana do you know what death by organophosphate poisoning looks like? First, his airway closed, like a hand over the throat.
Then he began to vomit uncontrollably, drowning in it.
We shocked him with 360 Joules, which is a horse kick to the chest.
His brain was still awake, the smell of his own burnt flesh in his nostrils.
His ribs cracked from the C.
P.
R.
, snapping free from the sternum like ice breaking deep beneath the surface.
There was no Elysian for Charlie.
There wasn't even dignity.
Now he's here in this ice cold room.
And if he isn't claimed, he'll be buried in an unmarked grave in Potters field, and no one will ever remember him.
I'll remember him.
Are you sure? Do you remember things in Elysian? I know grief better than almost anyone, and I can tell you one thing.
You can't go around it.
You can only go through it.
But you do get through it.
Somehow, you get through it.
[Woman speaking indistinctly over P.
A.
.]
Hi, Dana.
Dr.
Rorish thought you might wanna talk.
I can't cry.
What do you mean? I know I'm supposed to, but I I can't.
Am I even human anymore? Of course you are.
How is she? The surgeon successfully removed her colon, but, um, during the surgery, they found several other tumors on her spine.
We can make her as comfortable as we can, but she doesn't have much time left.
You, um you can see her now.
I don't know what to say to her.
She's just the woman that married my dad.
Seems she really loved him.
You have that in common, right? She's not my family.
She's your father's family.
And maybe your family's family is your family, if that makes any sense.
- [Groans.]
- Hi.
[Whispers.]
I'm so sorry.
Did I die? Does this look like heaven to you? [Laughs.]
You're f funny.
You were always so funny.
You were right before.
I never thanked you for taking care of him when he got sick.
Thank you, Barbara.
It was a lot to take on, and you did it without complaint.
Are you kidding? I bitched about it constantly.
But I was glad it never had to be strangers.
Truth is, I would've done anything for that man.
I loved him like crazy.
[Crying.]
I know you did.
Oh, stop.
I'm not saying that you're not an impossible person sometimes [Chuckles.]
'cause you really are.
- What I'm saying - Hey.
I love you, too, kid.
[Crying.]
[Woman speaking indistinctly over P.
A.
.]
[Inhales and exhales deeply.]
They love you, Dana.
They're the same people they always were.
Okay? [Sniffles.]
[Sobbing.]
[Muffled crying.]
[Sobbing continues.]
I'm so sorry.
[Coughs.]
[Wheezing.]
Lot of people worked very hard to keep you alive.
I'm sorry it's not going to turn out as you'd hoped.
Just 60 years ago, a doctor in this hospital would've called me crazy if I told him that he could see a developing fetus through the wall of the abdomen.
But in 1956, an obstetrician did it using sound waves.
And now you use his ultrasound every day.
You're right.
Technology is amazing.
In fact, it saved you today.
But it wouldn't have worked without human beings.
We're not saying that the future is without humanity.
We're saying that it will augment humanity.
There will be no more disease, no more loss, no more pain.
I want my pain.
Why would you wanna feel pain? Because I wanna feel love.
I feel pain for the people I miss.
I feel it because I loved them.
I wouldn't trade that love for anything, not even the pain.
I was surprised you called.
Yeah, well, I figured I drink coffee, you drink coffee, so why not? Great.
Don't get too excited.
Too late.
[Horns honking in distance.]
Hey.
Hey.
[Siren wailing in distance.]
Keigan had a bee sting.
[Chuckles.]
That's what caused the anaphylaxis.
This is my favorite place right here, thinking how many doctors have climbed these stairs.
You know, I can feel the history.
Felt it when I climbed it myself for the first time.
And I am.
I knew I was part of a legacy.
Mike, just give it a little more time.
You can do this, Mike.
Here.
Wait, wait, wait.
I tried to come back too soon, Angus.
And I've been trying to get back to normal.
But the truth is, that doesn't exist for me right now.
I'm not the same, and I don't know when I wanna be.
[Crying.]
That's yours now.

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