The Good Doctor (2017) s03e07 Episode Script

SFAD

1 Good morning.
[CELLPHONE DINGS.]
That's your third ding.
Good morning.
It's Carly.
She has arrived at her pathology conference.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Shaun, you need to text her back.
Her text wasn't a question.
It doesn't require a response.
True.
But it sucks to be left hanging.
You didn't like how it felt when you thought Carly was ignoring you.
I have received your message.
[WHOOSH.]
Sent.
Hmm.
You made me breakfast? Oh, God, no.
I ordered breakfast.
But I managed to keep it warm.
You don't have to do this.
I'm fine.
Did you get any sleep? I got enough.
Her death's not your fault.
She knew the risks.
She made a choice to save her baby.
I bet she'd make the same choice again, even knowing how it would end.
Thank you.
Thanks for breakfast.
[SIGHS.]
We do a complete enucleation of the right eye, then replace it with the temporary implant, and in a few weeks, you'll You know why blind people don't skydive? It scares the hell out of the dog.
[CHUCKLES.]
Let the doctors finish.
Okay, bud? Yeah, cancer eye out.
Fake eye in.
Just like last time.
I got it.
Check it out.
It even moves and everything.
You can't even tell it's fake.
Very cool.
Like a bionic superhero.
Yeah, and my superpower is tripping over stuff.
What time is the surgery? 3:00.
Which means I've got six hours left to blast some aliens.
[LCD SOUNDSYSTEM'S "DANCE YRSELF CLEAN" PLAYS.]
[VIDEO GAME SOUNDS.]
We've got to bring the resources I want to play it till the time comes Oh If anyone utters the word "Bubble Girl," I will transfer to a different hospital.
[LAUGHS.]
APRIL: When you were his age, would you have faced going blind with h-humor, maturity, and acceptance? I would have burned things down.
He's dealing with it in his own way.
We'll check in with him while you're taking care of the rest of the paperwork.
Make sure Charlie knows there's people he can talk to.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
Dr.
Reznick, take Charlie's blood to the lab.
Dr.
Browne, talk to him.
Maybe he'll open up to you.
[SIGHS, CLEARS THROAT.]
[EXHALES DEEPLY.]
Heart sounds are normal.
No sign of pericardial effusion.
SHAUN: You are the oldest SCID-patient I am aware of.
People with your condition usually die very young.
Yay.
I win.
Tara, imaging confirms that you have infected tissue on your right lung that's what's causing your breathing issues.
And we're gonna remove it with a procedure called decortication And you'll use the thoracoscopic approach to decrease risk of infection.
And I'll be in an enclosed chamber in the O.
R.
What else? I assure you, we'll be taking every precaution to keep you safe.
Dr.
Melendez, this building is a glorified incubator for every infection on the planet.
Considering I don't come with an immune system, I don't need assurances.
I need you to tell me how you're gonna not kill me.
SHAUN: We will administer a course of broad-spectrum antibiotics.
You will be transported to the O.
R.
under a respiratory hood.
The room will be equipped with laminar air flow and kept at a positive pressure of 8 Pascals.
Surgical instruments will be double-sterilized and all blood products will be irradiated.
Thank you, Dr.
Murphy.
Visitors will also have to go through a strict decontamination There won't be any.
The less time I spend with people, the better.
Are we done? How'd your talk with Charlie go? He wants to be left alone.
- No, you want to be left alone.
- And yet here we are.
Precocious pre-teen going blind.
Come on, that's Claire catnip.
You have to talk to him.
- Did he have any tests scheduled? - No.
[SIGHS.]
No one's seen him, heard him, smelled him.
I'm calling Security.
- Hold on.
- What are you doing? ENNIS: Where's Charlie? Did something happen? Is he okay? He's in imaging.
We'll have him back very soon.
He ordered a ride 15 minutes ago.
- To where? - It's close.
We could have him back before anyone knows he's gone.
- Are you insane? - You're right.
It's much better if we go back in there and freak out two already-freaked-out parents, and while you're at it, explain to Andrews that you didn't do what he asked you to do.
[SCOFFS.]
[SIGHS.]
[CELLPHONE DINGS.]
Hmm.
Which emoji was it? Just send it to me.
[CELLPHONE DINGS.]
Oh You told me I have to respond.
There is no response to Okay, I think Carly's saying she misses you and wants to know that you miss her, too.
You know all of that from one fake face? Just text her back something flirty, casual.
Say something like, "I can't stop thinking about you.
" I have stopped thinking about her many times today.
Do not text Carly that.
[SIGHS.]
I have to go.
Okay.
[CROWD CHEERS.]
[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE.]
[ORGAN PLAYS "CHARGE".]
This popcorn is terrible.
We have to get you back before your parents start to worry.
We're gonna be three years, five months too late.
The game is a blowout.
So, we leave now What's her name? What? I dunno.
The only words I've ever said to her are, "Can I have a slushy?" I just wanted to see her one last time.
- Go say hi.
- Are you crazy? I was asking her that earlier.
Tell her you think she's the most beautiful girl you've ever laid eyes on, and with your last few hours of sight, you wanted to see her face one more time.
As lovely as this is Don't ruin the moment.
The necrotic debris has completely encased the visceral pleura.
Follow me with the camera.
I don't want to spring a leak.
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
Tissue's fused her lungs to her chest wall.
I need the Kaiser Forceps.
Damn it.
Tissue's too thick to fit through the ports.
We need to do a thoracotomy.
And we can't open her up in an air-tight chamber.
If we have to cauterize a bleed, the whole thing could explode.
We have to take our Bubble Girl out of the bubble.
MAN: Lemonade! Get your ice-cold lemonade! [ORGAN PLAYING.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS.]
- We've been gone too long.
- MORGAN: Calm down.
It'll take the kid 15 seconds to chicken out.
- Or less.
- [BAT CRACKS.]
[CROWD CHEERING.]
I'm a wuss.
Most kids wouldn't have gone over at all.
Good for you.
- Can I - No.
- I'm just - No.
- It better be fast.
- What? We're giving a sad, nearly blind kid a few more minutes in the sun.
We could get an award for this.
[BAT CRACKS.]
[CROWD CHEERING.]
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
MELENDEZ: Change gloves every 20 minutes.
We need to be fast, but extremely careful.
Knife.
It's a Northern flying squirrel.
They don't fly so much as glide.
You're lucky it's not infected.
Well, it's a fascinating species.
They're uncommonly high-strung for a nocturnal rodent.
[RUSTLING.]
Is the squirrel in the bag? Yes.
Henry comes everywhere No, no, no, no, no.
That's okay.
I don't need to see him.
[ZIPPER CLOSES.]
Okay.
Has he bitten you before? It was my fault.
I provoke him.
Henry's a good boy.
It's not your fault.
You can't take him from me.
He's not allowed to hurt you.
- Hi.
It's 12:47.
- Thank you.
You're 17 minutes late for your 12:30 Mrs.
Pryce and I need to have a little talk.
It's okay.
Henry and I are fine.
Who's Henry? [SIGHS.]
You hesitated before cutting her open.
We had to work fast once I made the incision.
I was running through the procedure in my head.
There's no shame in needing to process a tough loss.
You should talk to someone.
I'd prefer to focus on my current patient rather than my last one.
[RINGING.]
- CLAIRE: Hey.
- Dr.
Browne, where's my patient? And before you say, "Imaging," I already know that's not true.
He's with me and Morgan.
He just needed to process a few things.
Everything's Watch out! What's going on? [TIRES SCREECH.]
Morgan just missed a turn.
She's a terrible driver.
Uh, no, we're on our way back now.
- Hurry.
- Okay.
[TIRES SCREECH.]
[TIRES SCREECH.]
How long was I out in the open? 13 minutes.
We got all of the infected tissue.
- [CELLPHONE DINGS.]
- That's annoying.
It was necessary to save your life.
No, I meant your phone.
Oh.
It is.
I bet it's your girlfriend.
How did you know? Only annoying girlfriends text that much.
I used to text my boyfriend all the time.
It annoyed him, too.
I am supposed to flirt with her, and I don't know how.
Did your boyfriend break up with you because you were annoying? No.
He died.
That's the downside of outliving your prognosis.
You outlive everyone else's too.
That is a downside.
[CELLPHONE DINGS.]
Get out your phone.
Hmm.
I'll tell you what to type.
I'm really good at phone sex.
It's the only kind of sex I can have.
We haven't had sex.
I'll stick to foreplay.
No, thank you.
Do you text your parents? Or are they dead too? [CHUCKLES.]
My parents are in Denver.
My dad's job transferred them there.
They always wanted to live near the snow.
They're outdoorsy, and I'm, you know, not.
I am not close to my parents either.
I have autism, and they don't.
I need to listen to your lungs.
[SIGHS.]
I just got really dizzy.
[SIGHS.]
What's going on? You have an infection.
Temperature is 103.
6.
BP is 80/50.
She's showing early signs of sepsis.
Start her on a course of IV immunoglobulin therapy, ADA-enzyme replacement and GM-CSF.
Okay.
I think we can do more than treat her infection Gene replacement therapy.
We harvest her stem cells and use a retroviral vector to transduce her DNA with the modified ADA gene.
If it works, she's cured.
And if it doesn't work, she dies.
There's a 50% chance her body will have an acute toxic reaction.
We're going to treat the infection.
She'll get another infection.
And another, and another, and eventually, one of them will kill her.
You don't know that.
She's already beaten the odds.
By cutting herself off from the world.
Traditional treatment is the safer course.
He's blowing off steam.
He's with the doctors.
He's safe.
APRIL: He's scared and overwhelmed, and obviously he felt like he couldn't tell us Because you've been keeping him under lock and key.
I'm protecting him.
[CRYING.]
We have to stay strong.
I think Charlie knows you're strong.
And he knows you love him.
But the moment you all heard the word "cancer," everything in Charlie's life changed.
And I think he needs to know that, at some point, it's going to start to feel like his life again.
My mom and dad used to do these things called spontaneous family adventure days SFADs.
They were pretty lame.
But they let me skip school.
Got to go to baseball games, drive around with blaring music.
I got to eat food that was inorganic and genetically modified.
Sometimes I even got to stay up past midnight.
Now we go to doctor's appointments.
And my mom makes lists.
And cries.
And my dad's quiet.
Just one more quick stop.
Morgan, Andrews is expecting us to Please, just 20 more minutes.
[DOOR OPENS.]
Park told me you rejected his gene therapy idea.
We can't dismiss plausible treatment options out of fear.
It's not fear.
It's a reasonable degree of caution.
Since when are you cautious? The benefit of the cure may be worth the risk.
Let Park take it to her.
No.
It's not worth it.
The cure is riskier in the short term, but the long-term upside is much greater.
We can give you the chance to live a long, healthy, normal life.
No, you can't.
I've been a freak my whole life.
And curing my disease, letting me take a breath of fresh air, it's not gonna make me normal.
[COUGHS.]
Increase the oxygen to 15 liters.
Start her on the IVIG.
[BEEPING.]
We need to let her rest.
I'm a freak, too.
People have called me that because I am not neurotypical.
And I used to be alone, like you.
Sometimes that was easier.
Because it is hard to be around people when you're not like them.
But now I have Dr.
Glassman, and a roommate who is a girl, and a girlfriend who is only annoying some of the time.
And I think it is better than being alone.
If you're cured, you can be "outdoorsy" like your parents.
Or you can stay inside and have phone sex.
It will be your choice.
The next time you go over my head will be the last.
Prep her for the gene replacement.
Nice work, Shaun.
No.
No way.
He's going blind.
It's his last chance to see a naked woman.
You're a woman.
I bet under those clothes, you're a naked one.
I'm his sister.
I'll slip you 50 bucks.
[CLICKS TONGUE.]
[SIGHS.]
My budget proposal, for your approval.
Surgical cases, for your review.
Before the board meeting tomorrow night.
[SIGHS.]
The pregnant woman? [PHONE BEEPS.]
How's Neil taking it? Five minutes, please.
I'm with Dr.
Lim.
I see there's a new member on the clinic team.
How's that going? Well, it's been half-a-day.
We're working out the kinks.
Well, if it's still smooth-sailing by close of business, let me know your secret.
I guess that answers my initial question.
[SIGHS.]
He keeps telling me he's fine.
You're the last person he'd tell if he weren't.
I'd be the second to last.
[PHONE BEEPS.]
I'm almost done.
You're the President.
He has to listen when you talk.
Or, pretend to.
[DOOR OPENS.]
Hey, the four-year-old with the ear infection has been here half an hour, his mother just pulled out fingerpaints.
You need to go.
[TAPS DESK.]
Debbie, this is Dr.
Lim, Chief of Surgery.
I know.
It's very impressive.
Come back if you get an ear infection.
- One more.
- No.
We're done.
The surgery can't start without me.
Where are we going next? Yosemite? The Great Wall? The top of Everest? It's never gonna be enough.
Claire, stop.
You can't pack a lifetime of things you're gonna miss into one day.
Your situation sucks, and it is unfair.
But you know what, life sucks, and it's unfair, and things end before we're ready.
We are going back.
Now.
[CAR DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
[SIGHS.]
No.
I'm not gonna have the surgery.
TARA: How long before I know if I've let you talk me into something really stupid? You could have an acute toxic reaction and die in the next 24 hours.
But we hope to see some positive sign your body is responding soon.
Okay.
Your transfusion is done.
We'll check on you in a half-hour.
Dr.
Murphy.
Would you sit with me? What do you want to know? Nothing.
I I just want someone to be here.
In case I croak.
Hmm.
It's probably all your annoying girlfriend wants, too.
Just to know you're there.
Carly's in good health and unlikely to die soon.
Some girls have all the luck.
[BEEPING.]
Debbie! You bellowed? This thing is broken.
Can you call someone from I.
T.
and send them over, please? Oh, I meant to tell you that I, um, upgraded our software.
It's gonna be faster, more efficient.
Not if I don't know how to use it.
You can't just change my entire software system without asking me.
I didn't change it.
I upgraded it.
[BEEP.]
- There.
Or kick out my Chief of Surgery.
Or interrupt my appointments.
You'll be here 20 hours a day if you don't stick to a schedule.
It's my call.
I'm not here to slap on Band-Aids or to write prescriptions.
That woman had serious issues we needed to discuss.
The one with the rodent in her purse? It's a squirrel.
It's a Northern flying squirrel.
You weren't gonna fix whatever issues she has with an extra five minutes.
It's my clinic, okay?! I decide how it runs! Okay.
I thought that you wanted me to be a part of it.
You know, to actually help and to make changes, have opinions.
But if that's not what you want, then I I should do what I promised I quit.
You're out of sutures.
I'm sorry.
I I shouldn't have said any of that.
I lost somebody recently.
And it hurts.
A lot.
And I took it out on you, and that is unfair.
But if you don't have this surgery, you won't ever drink another slushy at a baseball game.
Or feel the wind in your hair when you speed down the road.
Or Or touch a naked woman.
Now, this sucks.
It really, really sucks.
But it will get less sucky.
And the part that hurts so much right now will start to hurt less.
And life goes on, and you will have wonderful moments, and you will have sucky moments.
And it will be your life.
And it'll be a good life, Charlie.
I suspect it might even be a great life.
Oh, thank God.
[WHIMPERS.]
MORGAN: Sorry it took a while.
Car trouble.
ANDREWS: Welcome back, Charlie.
You had some good people very worried.
I'm really sorry.
You guys can ground me forever for this, but I just I just wanted to have one last day of fun.
We can be fun, too.
Again.
I was thinking it might be time to reintroduce the SFADs.
Baseball games, concerts, staying up late.
That sounds pretty lame.
[LAUGHS.]
We're running a little late, and we need to get you prepped.
I'm sorry.
I need some 5-0 nylon sutures.
And apparently we need to talk.
You can report back to the Chief of Surgery that I'm fine.
[BEEP.]
[INDISTINCT TALKING OVER P.
A.
.]
You don't have to talk to me.
You don't have to talk to her.
But you need to talk to someone.
I'm not a med student, Aaron.
I've lost patients before.
But you never lost someone who should have lived.
No one would be fine.
I wouldn't be.
You're not fine.
If for no other reason than your boss doesn't think so.
And the bigger problem is your girlfriend agrees with her.
We'll be right there as soon as you wake up.
We love you so much.
I love you, too.
[SNIFFLES.]
We'll take good care of him.
APRIL: Thank you.
[SNIFFLES.]
You ready? Yeah.
[SIGHS.]
I forgot to take his vitals.
I'm sorry.
Go ahead, I'll I'll bring him out.
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
I-I thought you already took my Shut up.
[GASPS.]
We're bringing the patient down now.
Vitals okay? Temp might be a little up, but he's ready now.
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
I just need you to count back from 10.
10 9 8 7 6 5 [DOOR CLOSES.]
You were right.
I'm not fine.
It's okay not to be fine.
You can't blame yourself.
I was the one holding the knife.
The blame lies with me.
But the responsibility is ours.
Yours and mine? Yes.
You're not objective about me because of our relationship.
If we weren't together, I'm not sure you would've agreed to let me do that surgery.
You honestly believe I approved a procedure that I didn't think you could do because we're sleeping together? No.
You thought I could do it.
That's the problem.
I think your personal feelings may have led you to overestimate me.
You came to me.
You sold me the surgery, told me that you could pull it off.
And now I'm at fault because I believed that you It's not about fault.
It's about being aware - so that this doesn't happen again.
- [SCOFFS.]
It will happen again.
I will make decisions.
You will have bad outcomes.
That doesn't mean either of us was wrong.
My approval had nothing to do with our relationship.
We can't know that for sure.
If we weren't dating, that woman might still be alive.
And we both have to live with that.
CHARLIE: Mom? Dad? APRIL: We're here, honey.
ENNIS: We're right here.
You did so good.
We're so proud of you, buddy.
MORGAN: Charlie.
It's Dr.
Reznick.
How are you feeling? Not awesome.
Are you in any pain? No.
No, I'm okay.
I'll let you rest.
Wait, Dr.
Reznick.
Yes? Thank you so much.
For everything.
You're welcome.
And Dr.
Browne? Dr.
Browne, are you here? Your T-cell count has increased.
And your fever dropped to 99.
3.
Your body's fighting the infection.
So, what does that mean? I'm cured? It's too early to use that word exactly.
We'll need to keep you in isolation for a few more weeks to make sure that your immune system is developing on pace.
And there is still a 5% to 7% chance of a toxic reaction.
But yes, the cure appears to be working.
You should tell your parents the good news.
What are they gonna do? Feed me juice through a straw? They could just be here.
I'm fine.
Let us know if you need anything.
I'll check in on you in the morning.
Thank you.
For not killing me.
You're welcome.
Oh, there is still a 5% to 7% chance of a Shaun.
She knows.
[DOOR SLIDES OPEN.]
Even your going Let it Knows you Rocking you to sleep From the Otherside [VOCALIZING.]
Aaron, you you do not owe me a gift.
I owe you an apology.
I was out of line today.
I was pushing way too hard.
It's not a gift.
Oh Is it punishment? Nurses swear by them.
The arch supports are supposed to be spectacular.
I'm not coming back to the clinic.
It was a bad idea, terribly executed.
[SIGHS.]
Two of the smartest women I know my wife and my new office manager think that I need to make some changes.
You wanted to help, you wanted to be a part of my life, I fought it.
[CHUCKLES.]
I proposed, and then I freaked out.
- Mm-hmm.
- We got married - You freaked out again.
- Yes, I did.
But for a legitimate reason.
There was a gun in the house, but that's not the point.
The point is that, in the midst of all of this [CHUCKLES.]
I took on not one, but two jobs at the hospital.
Yeah, which you love.
Not more than you.
Mm.
Come back to the clinic.
[CHUCKLES.]
Do I get to boss you around? A little.
Let's go upstairs.
I've been hoping that there's someone on the other end Charlie asked for you.
I've been holding onto something - That I'll never have - You connected with him.
I said what I had to to get him into surgery.
Nah.
You were your old self again.
My old self was always there for everyone.
Was giving away pieces of herself over and over.
Generator I've been waiting Come release me Charlie is still blind.
Come release me Come release me Come release me It was a hell of a day.
The blind kid didn't get me depressed.
You, on the other hand Deal with your crap before this is who you really become.
[SIGHS.]
I've been looking for a new kind of medicine Generator I've been waiting Come release me Come release me Generator I've been waiting Come release me Come release me Come release me Come release me AUDREY: Hey, this is Audrey.
You know what to do.
[CELLPHONE SLAMS.]
Oh, oh-oh Release me Come release me Generator I've been waiting Come release me Come release me Come release me Come release me
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