The Night Shift (2014) s03e01 Episode Script

The Times They are A-Changin

1 [Indistinct conversations.]
Excuse me.
I'm looking for my son Francis Watkins.
He was brought in with a fever.
Toph: Uh I don't see any pediatric fevers on the board.
- You know of any, Kenny? - No, no.
- Are you sure it was this hospital? - Well, yes.
My wife left me a voicemail.
I was at work.
She said she was bringing our 4-year-old son in.
He had a high fever San Antonio Memorial.
I-I know what I heard.
She was calling from the truck while she was on the way, so A truck? D-does she drive a green pickup? Yeah.
That's i F-150.
Why? Kenny, get the chopper ready to go.
Call police, fire department, EMS.
Get T.
C.
and Jordan on that chopper.
We need everybody out there right now.
Wait.
What what's going on? S-sir, you you might want to sit down for this.
What are you talking about? Your wife was in an accident, and your son may still be at the crash site.
Woman: All units, Route 16.
Possible 4-year-old child in the elements.
Doctors and EMS en route.
[Helicopter blades whirring.]
[Siren wails.]
- - Bet it was my brother's.
- [Laughs.]
- He did.
Topher, what are you even doing here tonight? I thought you had the night off.
I yeah, I did.
I volunteered so we didn't have to use another day shifter to cover for Drew while he's in Afghanistan.
Oh, you are so full of it.
You only volunteered so you wouldn't have - to spend an extra night with your mother.
- [Snickers.]
Okay, she's been here almost a month.
I'm gonna take every shift I can to get a break.
A month is never enough with your mother? - [Indistinct conversation.]
- [Door closes.]
I'm asking you, will you marry me? [Sobs.]
I love you, but I can't.
I'm sorry.
Hey, uh, Tee, did I did I mention I have you and Jordan working together tonight? No.
No, 'cause you said we were on alternate shifts.
I'm sorry.
The schedule it couldn't be helped.
Hey, you have to rip the Band-Aid off sometime.
Oh, this is serious.
I Stop.
[Helicopter blades whirring.]
So, then, Rick e-mailed me this morning and says we now have a dog.
[Laughs.]
He's cute.
I'm sure he's great, but maybe you don't get a dog when I'm in Afghanistan.
Well, life goes on back home, Drew.
Your being married doesn't stop that.
Man: Major.
But I'll tell you what I will check him out when I get back in nine days.
Rick or the dog? Nine days don't rub it in.
I've still got 104.
Well, please, I only have nine left because I've been for 171.
What's the first thing you're gonna do when you get back? [Sighs.]
I'm gonna hug my daughter for about a week.
And I'm gonna take a bath for about a month, 'cause I'm a little ripe.
So, Shannon, this isn't anyone's favorite thing to do, but it's part of a first-year's job.
Now, only an M.
D.
can legally declare someone dead, so the retirement center brings them by.
You check for a pulse, then sign the death certificate.
- Any questions? - No, pretty simple.
- All right.
- [Thunder rumbles.]
We're still doing this? They all have to go through it.
So, uh, Gwen told me you and T.
C.
haven't spoke for, like, two months.
Is that gonna be weird tonight? Gwen tell you anything else you want to share? No, no, I'm just gonna shut up now.
[Thunder crashes.]
[Both screams.]
[Chuckles.]
- Ow! - She's a feisty one.
Guess that's why you hired her.
- Oh! - What the hell?! What what are you doing?! What what are you doing?! How was that your first reaction? You jumped me, man! Wait, I didn't.
It's a practical joke! I didn't know.
I just reacted! Don't pull a tiger's tail if you don't want to get bit! - What?! - Okay, okay, okay, okay! Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! Okay, okay.
Kenny: Hey, no harm, no foul.
Everybody, I'd like to welcome our very own Dr.
Shannon Rivera to the night shift.
- [Cheers and applause.]
- Yeah, girl! Whoo! [Police radio chatter.]
Jordan? Nasty two-car accident out on Route 16.
T.
C.
and Topher just went out in the chopper.
The other patient is 5 minutes out.
Okay, Kenny, Shannon, I need you to prep Trauma Two.
Paul, page Scott for a trauma consult.
Yep.
Mike: Hell of a night for this, gentlemen.
This dry lightning is a bitch.
Try flying through it.
- [Man shouts indistinctly.]
- [Siren wails.]
What do we got, Mike? First one's on her way to your hospital.
That's her car there.
Witnesses said the truck was hauling ass.
It flipped, threw the driver.
We started moving it, then we saw her neck hanging by a thread literally.
- Where is she? - There.
- Where? - Right here.
- [Police radio chatter.]
- [Indistinct conversations.]
Topher: Son of a bitch.
- Stand back.
Everyone back.
- Okay, this one is me, Tee.
Woman: Dr.
Alexander to the ambulance bay.
- Thank you.
- What do we got? Female, 30s, trauma to her wrists and abdomen from MVA.
- Vitals unstable.
- Okay.
- How low is her pressure? - Not low high.
Systolic is 190.
190? Are you sure? [Moaning.]
It really hurts.
Please, you have to help her.
Okay, her heart's racing.
Let's get her inside.
Kelly, I'm really scared.
It's gonna be okay, Luce.
Run a trauma panel, and type and cross for four.
Ma'am, I promise your friend is in good hands with Dr.
Alexander.
She's not my friend.
She's my wife.
Oh, sorry.
Uh, let me take a look at this cut.
So, what happened out there? Uh, we were headed out to dinner, and some nut in a pickup truck just flew by us like 100 miles per hour, and and we swerved.
Kenny, I'm gonna need a lac tray set up with 4-0 Prolene.
Kenny: Yep, got it.
Let's get you fixed up, and I promise we'll let you know - everything that's going on with her.
- Okay.
All right, here we go.
T.
C.
: Toph, careful! Mike: You should let us get her down! It's not safe for you with all this dry lightning! And if you guys get hit, it'll be my ass! All right, we heard you! We got this.
We're here to help you, ma'am.
It's gonna be all right.
I'm Dr.
Zia.
That's Dr.
Callahan above us.
Just hold still, okay? I'm gonna check you out.
Then we're gonna get out of here.
She has a strong pulse.
Whoa! There's a big piece of glass at the end of her SCM.
Be careful.
If that glass shifts when we're moving her, - it's gonna slice her trachea in half.
- Yeah, copy that.
Throw me some Kerlix, and I'll stabilize the piece.
On it.
You got it? Here one more.
[Groans.]
Damn it, there's bubbles torn lung.
We're gonna have to intubate as soon as we get her down.
Let's get her on the backboard and get the hell out of here! Get that backboard ready! [Thunder crashes.]
[Helicopter blades whirring.]
Yeah oop, oh! Man, I'm playing dirty now.
- That's a kick to the nuts.
- [Video game sound effects.]
Are you sure you've played this before, 'cause you are really Okay, okay, wait oh, roundhouse! Thank you, elbow.
Blocked.
You're going down.
I had a competition last week, and I got second.
- You did? - Yeah.
Did Daddy film it? No.
- Well did you do the sparring? - Yeah.
Oh, now you're going down.
Watch this.
- [Distant explosions.]
- Congratulations, sweetheart.
That's amazing.
- Pause, pause, pause, pause.
- [Explosion.]
Okay, game on.
- Aw, come on, stop.
- Yeah, there was a - [Loud explosion.]
- What was that? - [Indistinct shouting.]
- That was close.
Oh, it's nothing, sweetheart.
It's just fireworks.
We set them off all the time.
- So, show me your yellow belt.
- Here, look.
I'm so proud of you.
- [Explosion.]
- [Indistinct shouting.]
- Major, we have casualties.
- Okay.
- Let's get them out! - I got to go.
- 24.
- 7.
I love you.
I love you, too.
Marquez, let's go.
Man: Let's go.
Move! [Alarm blaring.]
[Missile whooshing.]
[Indistinct shouting.]
Man #1: Oh, my God, oh, my God! Man #2: Medic! - Aah! - My arm! - Medic! - My arm! [Indistinct shouting.]
Shrapnel injury to the abdomen.
Come on, get him to the O.
R.
! Yes, Major.
Above-the-elbow amputation.
Let's get a tourniquet on this.
Let's get him inside.
Drew! Over here.
Check for shrapnel.
I'll apply the tourniquet.
[Inhales sharply.]
My leg how's it look? It's gonna be all right.
Just a little bit of blood.
Yeah, a badass guy like you, it's just like a bee sting.
Marquez: Docs, we got local nationals coming in, hit by our counterfire.
You're kidding me? Drew, you finish this up.
I'll take the L.
N.
- [Groans.]
- Easy.
- [Indistinct shouting.]
- Syd: Hold up! Drew: Let's get that gurney over here.
[Indistinct shouting.]
Let's go! [Engine revs.]
Diffuse guarding.
She needs the O.
R.
That's why I'm here.
Let's get her up.
Uh, there's a hitch.
Her B.
P.
is up to Oh, now it's at 230, and her heart rate's at 140.
History of high blood pressure? None reported, but it keeps going up, even on Nipride.
What do you think's going on? I don't know.
Waiting for tox screens.
Well, she'll never make it through surgery with pressure that high.
Lab says they're short-handed and running slow.
No tox-screen results yet.
All right, just talked to the cops.
Witnesses say she was driving erratic, swerving all over the road.
- Could be meth, coke? - Hmm.
She doesn't seem the type.
At least, her partner doesn't.
Come on, Kenny, how long you been working in the E.
R.
? Good point.
It could be stimulants for A.
D.
D.
or something.
You know, either one would cause the elevated B.
P.
, the heart rate, erratic driving.
If the labs are running slow, let's talk to her wife, see what she knows.
Yeah, Paul just sutured up her arm.
She's getting X-rays now.
I'll bring her right down.
- [Door opens.]
- [Beeping.]
And so, Shannon, if you close a wound like I just did, you end up with a much smaller scar, if there even is a scar.
Maybe you can, uh, try it next time.
Really? Gee.
Thanks.
Are there any available lockers? - Uh, Ragosa's.
- Yeah, this one right there.
He's actually interning in Dallas to be closer to his kids when his wife took them.
Like, it's a whole thing.
Really great story.
You should write a book.
You have an attitude.
Look who's talking.
You know, I'm not some wide-eyed intern you're gonna impress, and I might listen to you a little more if you didn't try to humiliate me with a practical joke on my first night.
Okay, okay.
They did it to me on my first night.
And I'll bet they've done it even more after that, haven't they? Yeah, yeah.
Uh, n-no.
How is that even relevant? Well, I don't let anyone mess with me, and after they saw I punched you, no one else will mess with me, either.
Wait, so, y-you punched me 'cause you were scared or to send a message? Okay, hey, t-this is a hospital okay n-not a prison.
- [Door opens.]
- Listen, I'm I'm a doctor, right? You should l-listen to me.
Syd: Guys, 3 2 1.
- Man #1: Let's get bed 3 prepped for O.
R.
- Man #2: Yes, sir.
[Distant explosion.]
We know what happened? She was riding in a taxi that got caught in the crossfire.
The driver was DOA.
She wouldn't let the medics examine her.
[Speaking Pashto.]
Dr.
Jennings.
[Speaking Pashto.]
I speak English.
My name is Sharbat.
Okay, good.
Sharbat, that's a beautiful name.
I'm here to help you.
Is there anything hurting? My stomach and my chest.
It hurts when I breathe.
Okay, well, we'll check you out.
How old are you? Can I have my phone? I need to call my brother.
Uh, yeah, we'll try and track that down for you.
Please, I need to talk to him now.
I understand, but I need to treat you first, okay? So, I need to get this off so I can examine you.
But he cannot see me.
Sharbat, I'll turn around.
I promise.
I'm just here to help Dr.
Jennings.
Sharbat, you're pregnant.
Do you know how many months? I think around 8.
We're just gonna take a look at the baby.
Do you have a husband? H-he was killed by the Taliban.
That's why I was leaving my village.
They will kill us all.
[Missile whooshing.]
[Explosion.]
You have to call my brother.
He's the only one that can help me.
Can you pause it right there? Dr.
Alister, can you take a look at this? Does does he does does he have to? Please, Sharbat, I need his help to make sure you and the baby are safe.
- You're talking - Yes.
Sharbat, your baby is okay, but you got a small tear in your uterus from the accident.
We're gonna get an American baby doctor here to come and see you, but it's gonna take some time for them to get here.
Please, just help my baby.
We will, but in the meanwhile, I need to take some pictures of your chest to make sure that you're okay.
Okay.
Kelly: I don't understand.
If she needs surgery, why is she still in the E.
R.
? We're having trouble getting her heart rate and pressure down.
We just saw a doctor a couple of weeks ago.
Her pressure was fine.
W-why is it so high now? Well, we were hoping maybe you could tell us.
Is she taking any medication for A.
D.
D.
, narcolepsy? No.
Any chance she was using drugs meth, cocaine? No.
God, no.
She's completely healthy.
Lucia won't even take an aspirin.
She's strictly vegan.
Are you sure? Witnesses said she was driving erratically.
She's not on anything.
I know my wife.
We're not suggesting that you don't, but any information that you have could help save her.
- Shannon, can you pull the - Ultrasound? Thank you.
Kelly: What what are you doing? Now we need to monitor the bleeding in her kidney.
[Beeping.]
Paul, thoughts? Bleeding is stable.
That's good.
Any sicknesses lately uh, flu? Uh, no, not really.
Oh, she's complained of headaches, hot flashes, dizziness, but the doctor just said, - "Welcome to menopause.
" - Was the doctor a man? - Yeah, he is.
- [Monitor beeping erratically.]
Jordan: She's in V-Fib.
Shannon, paddles.
Oh, my God.
What's happening?! - Nurse.
- Why what are you Kelly: Oh, my God, help her! You have to do something! - What's going on?! - It's okay, ma'am.
Nurse: Please, we need you to step outside.
- No.
- Okay, clear.
- Clear.
- Clear.
- Please.
- [Paddles thump.]
- [Flatline.]
Still V-fib.
All right, charge.
[Beeping, whirring.]
- We clear? - Clear.
- Clear.
[Thunder crashes.]
Topher: Okay, sounds good.
You're in on the left.
- Okay.
- [Sighs.]
- Aw.
- You okay? Yeah, I just tweaked my shoulder a little bit.
Got to say, it's good to have you back out here with me, buddy.
- Yeah, it feels good to be back.
- Yeah.
I get so bored being charge doc, you know? I spend half the night sitting behind that desk.
Why can't I go out sometimes? You know you can go out whenever you want.
You're the boss.
Damn right.
Yeah.
I want to get back to who I used to be, instead of this house cat I turned into.
Besides, who knows when I can send you and Jordan out together again, right? Yeah, probably best to wait on that.
Things are still a little raw.
[Monitor beeping.]
Crap, Toph, Toph, Toph.
The pressure's dropping, the pressure's dropping.
- She's bleeding out.
- Toph, we got to pull that glass.
- Oh, is that all? - Yeah.
Surgery in a flying earthquake.
Okay, look if you pull the glass, I'll find the bleeder and clamp it off.
All right, let's use the NOD this time.
It's hard enough to intubate.
- Okay.
- We'll never see that bleeder without it.
Got it? Clamp? Wait.
Got it.
Pull it out nice and slow, buddy.
Yeah.
Okay, that's the plan.
Yeah.
God.
Look at that thing.
It's like an iceberg.
Lucky it didn't take her head off.
Okay, I see the bleeder.
[Thunder crashes.]
Aah! Jesus! Son of - What? - I got I got whited out by lightning.
- Great, so you're blind now, too? - No, I got this.
Just be steady.
I'm close, close.
[Chuckles.]
The point.
Got it.
Bleeding stopped.
Okay, pressure's coming back up.
Nice job.
[Sighs.]
Hold compressions.
- I have a pulse.
- We're in sinus.
Shannon: B.
P.
and heart rate are coming down.
What do you think caused the V-fib? [Beeping.]
- It was the F.
A.
S.
T.
scan.
- Right.
What do you mean? Scott: When Dr.
Alexander ran the ultrasound probe over the kidney, the heart rate and the B.
P.
shot up.
Jordan: Like this.
- [Rapid beeping.]
- Now look here.
Above the kidney, what do you see? A pheochromocytoma tumor of the adrenal gland.
Paul, I was asking Shannon.
I know you know.
- And I knew that.
- [Scoffs.]
What the hell is your problem, man? - What the hell is your problem? - You got to be the big man.
Like, all day, I've been trying to be nice.
Is it 'cause I'm a girl? - Then, like, you just - Hey, hey, hey, the patient.
It must have gotten crushed in the accident and released adrenaline into her bloodstream.
Yeah, and every time we pushed on it, it had the same effect.
So, it needs to come out.
Let the O.
R.
know we're coming.
Not so fast.
Operating on it can release a fatal dose of hormones into her system.
So, Shannon, what do we do? Put her on alpha and beta blockers for the next few days until it's safe to go into surgery.
Exactly.
And hope she doesn't start bleeding again.
Major! Captain! Major, Captain, new development! Her husband is here for her.
- What? Her husband? - Sharbat, what is going on? - I thought he was dead.
- Where is she?! Marquez: He's got to be somebody important, 'cause he walked right through security.
- What are you doing to my wife? - You can't just walk in here.
- You got to get out.
- Yes, I can.
- No, you can't.
- Get away from her! - You're a man! You cannot look at her! - We are saving her life! - I think that supercedes those rules! - Get away from her.
- Drew! - I'm not leaving! - Get away! - Drew, stand down! I have got it from here.
Leave now.
That is an order! Listen to her.
He should have never been here.
I'm sorry, sir.
There was an emergency.
Your wife was in an accident.
There's been some bleeding around the heart that I'm draining now.
There also seems to have been an issue with the baby.
Then she needs a midwife.
I'm taking her.
[Sighs.]
She can't go now.
She's been sedated, and she is too sick for a midwife.
Her uterus has a small tear.
So far, the baby is okay, but we have called in a specialist.
I make decisions for my wife, not you.
She needs medical attention.
You are guests in our country.
She's my property, and I'm taking her! [Speaking Pashto.]
This may be your country, but right now she is my patient.
You've got a problem, you file a complaint.
Until then, get out of my E.
R.
Ah, you will pay for this.
[Shouting in Pashto.]
[Sighs.]
I thank you.
You see? Please, don't let him take me.
[Sobbing.]
[Indistinct conversations.]
42-year-old female, deep lacerations to her neck causing a tracheobronchial injury.
I had to clamp off her pulmonary vein.
E.
T.
tube's in the left main bronchus.
- Sats and B.
P.
are stable.
- Not bad for in the field.
- We got it from here.
- [Groans.]
Hey, need me to massage that shoulder, old man? No, I'm good.
It's just It's just sore.
- [Cellphone ringing.]
- What is this? 10 bucks says it's Janet complaining about your mother? Oh, yeah? Yeah? Okay.
Well, you owe me $10 'cause it's my mother complaining about Janet.
Hi, Mom.
Miss you.
O-okay.
Can you speak English? 'Cause I can't understand you when you talk this fast.
[Chuckles.]
Hey.
Hey.
Do you, uh, want to [Indistinct conversations.]
So, I heard there was a bit of a situation out there.
Yeah.
I know you're not the biggest fan of lightning.
But, you know, you don't have a choice, right? Uh, S-Scott has her now.
So, how how's the other patient the driver? - She went into V-fib arrest.
- Oh.
- Pretty sure she has a bleeding pheo.
- Wow, that's not good.
So, listen, I, uh, want to - Let's talk outside.
- Yep.
Look, I just don't want it to be awkward for us working together, for you.
I don't want it to be awkward for you, either, but I don't see I don't see how - Let's get him inside.
- it's not going to be.
- I mean, you'll figure it out, right? - Yeah.
I think the best thing we could do is just face it, and eventually, we'll get over it, right? That sounds like you're not thinking about going back to the day shift.
Why would I Why? I I love the night shift.
Uh, do you want to transfer to the day shift? [Chuckling.]
No.
I mean, it might be easier for you.
[Chuckling.]
Oh.
I mean, you said you were considering it anyway.
Um, no.
No, I didn't.
You suggested it when we broke up, but I never said that I was going to.
- Yes, you did.
- No, I didn't.
No, I didn't.
- You you you said it.
- Okay - Woman: Hey, need the room.
- That's the thing you don't listen.
- I well - All right, you just get an idea in your head - of what you want to happen - Okay, okay.
and then you just expect it to.
I'm not the only one I'm not the only one who does that.
- Meaning? - Like like when I asked you could I go to Afghanistan, and you said, "Sure.
" And then I went and came back, you were pissed at me.
- I never said go.
- Yes, you did.
No, I didn't.
I said that I wasn't gonna stop you, because you would resent me if I did.
- That's the same thing.
- No, it's not.
[Sighs.]
Okay, well, T.
C.
, did I want you to go? No.
What pregnant woman wants to send the father of her child into a war zone? Then why not just say that? You would have gone anyway.
Mollie: Excuse me, doctors.
Jordan, your patient's new CBC is back.
The lab says to call them ASAP.
- Excuse me.
- Mm-hmm.
Give it some time, honey.
- She just needs time.
- Thank you.
- [Suction whooshing.]
- Got to say, for a woman who was ejected out of her truck onto a freeway sign, she's doing pretty well.
She's very lucky she had such a great surgeon.
Yeah, you were awesome.
I was talking about you, Paul.
Really nice assist here.
Like I said, you've got the gift.
- All done with the sutures? - Yeah.
All right, let's go take a look at the film, make sure there weren't any issues with her other lung before we close her up.
[Monitor beeping.]
Hey.
What's going on with you and this new intern, Shannon? She's very annoying, and she thinks she knows way more than she actually does.
So did you, if I remember correctly.
But from her work at the reservation clinic, she's coming in with way more experience than most first-years.
But the bigger issue is if she's gonna rattle you like that, what's gonna happen to you when things go south in here? Well, it's totally different.
How? [Sighs.]
I'm in control here.
I'm in control in the big stuff like my hand.
I almost lost everything, - but I took it like a man.
- [Sighs.]
- I did the rehab, and I'm here.
- That's true, you did.
Right, but the social stuff never been the best at.
You know, like, uh, I've always been the smartest guy in the room.
I mean, not to say that I'm the smartest guy in this room.
- Okay, look, Paul.
Paul, listen to me.
- You're very smart.
I need you to have the same confidence out there, when you're dealing with your bosses and your ex-colleagues and everyone else that you have in here with your surgeries.
A night shift at a busy trauma center like this is the Wild West, and we are the calm in the eye of the storm.
You know, we make it all okay for everyone.
You get it? Right.
Scott, I need you.
Next up.
[Sighs.]
Okay, Paul, finish the repair and close.
Okay.
6-0 Prolene on a needle driver, please.
The repeat blood test shows that her blood count is dropping, which means that her tumor is probably bleeding again.
- So, can't you just fix it? - It's not that simple.
Normally, we premedicate someone for a couple of weeks with adrenaline-blocking medication before operating, but with her bleeding again, we have to go in.
But you should know there are serious risks taking it out now, but the risks are far more serious if we don't.
Are you telling me she could die? We're telling you it's complicated.
Then uncomplicate it for me.
I wish we could, but we can't.
Now, it's risky, but this is her best chance.
We weren't even supposed to go out tonight, but I-I pushed her because I wanted to.
You know, maybe if we had just stayed home, this wouldn't have happened - Okay, whoa, whoa.
- or we wouldn't have crashed.
Kelly, this is not your fault, okay? Sometimes bad things happen to good people.
It is my fault.
We've been fighting so much lately, and in the car, I got so mad, I asked her for a separation.
And she was so upset [Speaking Spanish.]
Okay, all right, all right, um, why don't we get some coffee.
If we move her, she doesn't make it neither does the baby.
I'm just telling you what our orders are.
I didn't say that I agreed with them.
So we're just gonna kowtow to this bastard who calls this little girl his property? Back in the States, he's in jail for statutory rape.
Yeah, and you don't think it pisses me off? I've got a daughter two years younger than her.
[Grunts.]
This country is like stepping into the Bible.
But as much as we don't like it, we are required by our superiors to follow their rules.
This is what victory looks like, Drew.
Get used to it.
You're not back in your chummy E.
R.
Yeah, back there, we'd figure out a way to help her.
Sharbat, how are you feeling? The baby? He's fine.
He? It's a boy? - Yes.
- [Sighs.]
Sharbat, I need I need you to talk to me about your husband.
I'm sorry I lied.
I just I didn't want you to contact him.
I didn't want him to find me.
He wants to take you back to the village.
- No, no.
- We can delay it.
I don't know what else there is we You don't know how cruel he is.
You don't know how cruel his family is to me.
I was sold to him at 13 by my parents.
- I hate this country.
- He doesn't care about me.
He only wants his baby boy.
My brother is trying to help me.
He made enough money to go to Australia.
- You have to find him.
- We are trying, but it's tricky for us because your husband is right about one thing.
We have to follow Afghan laws.
[Sighs.]
Then I am dead.
- She said Annie called this in.
- Who's Annie? She's bringing in an O.
D.
How'd she sound? How's she doing? - I don't know.
She sounded upset.
- Who's Annie? Kenny: T.
C.
's sister-in-law who disappeared last year, cleaned him out, showed up a month ago out of the blue.
- Hey.
- 29-year-old male, O.
D.
Pinpoint pupils.
B.
P.
is 90/60.
Any idea what he's on? Oxycontin.
Okay, Shannon you're with me.
Let's put him in curtain 2.
You okay? - Yeah.
- Yeah? Yeah, I'm good.
Okay, hypotension with respiratory depression.
What do we do? High-flow oxygen, I.
V.
fluids, Narcan.
Looks like somebody paid attention in class.
Go ahead and do it.
2-milligram dose? Actually in chronic narcotic users, you should start with a .
4-milligram dose to decrease the risk of flash pulmonary edema.
Wow.
Did you just pay attention in class, or did you teach it? I've done this a few times before.
- Right, at the clinic.
- Yeah.
Plus, I had it done to me when I O.
D.
'd.
- [Chuckles.]
- No, really.
I had a pretty bad Vicodin habit in high school.
Oh.
Don't worry, I'm all better now.
Oh good.
[Chuckles.]
[Breathing heavily.]
Hey.
Hello, sir.
Welcome back to the world.
Oh, you son of a bitch.
- Excuse me? - You ruined my high! Actually, we saved your life.
You ruined my high! Maybe you should lie back.
What I'll show you.
This is for you, Doctor! [Grunting.]
Oh, God.
Cleanup on aisle 3! For the record, I never did anything like that.
Is that better, buddy? Yeah.
- Ah.
- [Sighs.]
The accident is not why she's in surgery.
It's the adrenal tumor.
It's a it's like a time bomb inside of her, and it could have happened anytime, anywhere, so that has nothing to do with you.
I just got so tired of the arguing.
All right, look, uh I know that you and I don't know each other, but do you mind if I ask has the fighting just been this past couple of months, you know, where she's been irritable, she's had angry outbursts? Yeah, that's it.
She's just been so angry at me.
Okay, well, those are all, you know, symptoms of adrenaline leaking from the tumor.
Oh, my God.
I'm not saying that it's the cause of all your problems, but - It explains a lot.
- Yeah.
We've been through so much these past few months.
Sometimes it's hard to get past all that pain.
- You know? - [Chuckles.]
Yeah.
The baby? Uh Yeah, I've been there.
Hell, I think I'm still there.
But, you know, you [Sighs.]
you got to try, because even if it doesn't work out, at least you know you did your best.
I just I hope that we can get back to where we used to be.
I hope you can, too.
All I'm saying is I don't like you working in a halfway house with addicts.
Lots of temptation.
I just I just don't think it's good for you.
I know you don't, but I told you when I agreed to stay with you that I needed this.
I'm still hoping I need to see wasted lives and how close - I came to being one of them.
- It's ever coming Okay, I'll you know what? I'll back off, all right? I've I've had enough fights with women tonight.
- Just just you do what you want.
- Just tell me something Jordan? - Yeah, first night back working together.
- Can I stop running? It took about three minutes to get into it.
- Yeah, I broke through - Well, you're both hurt.
When you get hurt, you lash out.
- Walls to get back home to yours - It's easier than feeling pain.
Well, you could just move on.
- Now I am unglued - [Scoffs.]
Don't be such a guy, T.
C.
She lost a child.
She lost you.
You guys have been together off and on for what, since you were like 25.
Give it some time.
She went to work on a reservation for two months.
Thought she'd be fine when she got back.
- Fine? She's not sick, T.
C.
- Yeah.
Okay, so, what? - You're defending Jordan now? - She's figuring her life out.
Look, T.
C.
, I love you.
You're my family, but sorry, dude, I get it.
I see her side of things.
You push the edge, you take chances.
It's why you can save lives when other people can't.
You have a gift, and that's an exciting guy to meet, to date But not to marry? - but not to marry.
- That's not new, okay? She knew exactly who I was from the start.
And then, all of a sudden, it was, "You can't get on a Harley.
You can't join S.
W.
A.
T.
-team training.
You can't go to Afghanistan.
You can't " No one wants the father of their child going to Afghanistan.
You weren't sent over there, T.
C.
- You chose to go.
- To look after my best friend.
And she probably thought she was your best friend.
River ever rolling Look you don't want to change, and you shouldn't have to change, but don't blame her 'cause she changed.
The light is coming on everywhere It's very interesting advice coming from the woman who married my crazy-ass brother.
Yeah, and I was a widow at 28.
Oh, I'm still Right.
[Elevator bell dings.]
- And this one just came in? - Yeah.
Well, I got the rejection letter from Loyola earlier.
Now this one from Seton Hall.
That's five law-school rejections.
Game over.
Now, first of all, it's only four, okay? You got wait-listed at Georgetown.
Which is a nicer way of saying they rejected me.
Look, you applied late, okay? You retake the LSAT.
You have time to take one of those test-tutoring courses.
Then you'll knock it out of the park.
Look, all those law schools will be begging to get you.
I don't know.
Maybe it wasn't meant to be.
Unh-unh-unh.
Hey, hey.
Don't go quitting on your dreams, now.
Now, how many times have you told me about how tired you are of being on this side of those 911 calls that you wished you could help those women before it's too late.
- About a million, gazillion times.
- Yeah.
- [Chuckles.]
- Yeah? So it'll take a little longer to be a lawyer than you thought.
Buck up.
You're the best.
You know that? - Of course I know that.
- [Chuckles.]
So, um, is Annie okay? Yeah.
Thought she'd be more shook up, but, uh, she's hanging in there.
What's the update on the women we brought in from the flipped-over truck? I heard it went well.
Paul is closing up now.
- That's great.
- [Monitor beeping.]
- Pressure is dropping.
- Yeah, I-I know.
More lap pads.
I need more lap pads, please.
I took out the packaging to close up.
I must have dislodged a clot from the subclavian artery.
- Clamp.
- Heart rate climbing.
I know.
Too much blood.
I can't see.
- You need help.
- No, I've got this.
Woman: I'm paging Dr.
Callahan.
[Beeping.]
What's going on, Paul? Why did you page me? I've got it.
They shouldn't have called you.
Let me in there.
I'll show you.
- I got this, T.
C.
- Paul.
No, I said I got it! I'm the surgeon! I'm sorry.
I just I-I have this, all right? Vessel loops on a hemostat.
T.
C.
, hold pressure that side, please.
- Okay, you got it.
- Thank you.
Paul: Okay.
Hemostat.
Hold pressure.
- [Chuckles.]
- Good job.
Guess you didn't need me.
That's what I told them.
Let's repair that artery.
7-0 Vicryl to me and Dr.
Callahan, please.
Happy to assist, Doctor.
And cut.
Scott: Get that off to Pathology.
- Right away, Doctor.
- Look at that.
Could have gone into bomb retrieval.
[Chuckles.]
Well, there's always time to change careers.
[Rapid beeping.]
B.
P.
's back up.
It's 170 systolic.
What the hell? Did you tie off all the vessels? - Yes, yes, I did.
- Heart rate's 160.
- [Flatline.]
- She's coding.
Come on.
Get this draping off.
Charge me up.
Hey! Everything all right? - I heard she was in trouble.
- False alarm.
Paul had it all under control.
The guy is a rock in the O.
R.
You, uh, talk to any of her people yet? No, I left a message, haven't heard back.
State police is tracking down the truck registration, see if they can locate any of the family.
Okay, when you do, let me know.
Be nice to be able to give some good news.
- Yeah.
- It doesn't make any sense.
I got the whole thing out.
Scott, what if you didn't get it all out? I did.
I got it all.
Look, there's Nothing.
Nothing there.
Okay, but what if there's a second one? 10% of all pheos have a secondary tumor outside of the adrenal gland.
Oh, that would explain a lot of this, but where is it? [Rapid beeping.]
Scott, her blood pressure is still rising.
[Sighs.]
Come on, show yourself, you bastard.
Release the retractor.
Hah, there just distal to the aortic bifurcation.
Clamp.
There you go.
B.
P.
is down to 180/100.
- [Steady beeping.]
- Nice save.
Very nice.
All right, let's get that sucker out of there.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
What? Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
I un I understand, sir.
No, sir.
Yes, sir.
I will.
Thank you, sir.
[Sighs.]
[Beeping.]
- Didn't sound good.
- Yeah, it's not.
Sharbat's husband is a little more connected than we thought.
So, what does that mean? It means we're just trying to figure things out.
Her father-in-law is on the Provincial Council.
He's threatening to close roads, deny access to villages, end the supply chain.
He can make life miserable for the base.
Why are you whispering? What is going on? Well, we're just talking about some medical stuff, Sharbat.
Did you tell the general what was at stake? Yeah, I told him.
I was the one getting my ass reamed, okay? And here's the big surprise he doesn't care.
He's big picture solve the problem, keep the place running.
The general was very clear about that.
Are you sending me back with him? Okay, you'll have to keep calm for the baby, okay? We're gonna try to figure this out.
Don't you promise her anything.
I'm not.
We are trying to figure it out.
[Crying.]
I can't go, I can't go.
I can't.
I'd rather die than go back there.
[Rapid beeping.]
Distant heart sounds.
Got JVD.
- She's in cardiac tamponade.
- [Sighs.]
Looks like the drainage was a temporary fix.
She needs a pericardial window.
Let's get her into the O.
R.
I thought you got all of it.
- I did.
- Dr.
Clemmens removed all of the tumors from Lucia's adrenal gland, but the cancer has spread through her lymph nodes.
And I'm afraid it's stage IV.
S-so, what's the treatment? I'm sorry, Kelly, but there is no treatment at this point.
It's a matter of weeks, a couple months, maybe.
Right now, we need to focus on Lucia's comfort and pain management.
I just learned that her anger wasn't her fault, and I I was gonna get my Lucia back.
And now you're telling me that I'm gonna lose her forever? We'll, we're we're very sorry.
There was no way of knowing until we got in there.
Our last words were a fight.
Yeah, your last words before the accident, but now you have a chance to tell her what she really means to you.
Northwestern med school pretty impressive.
- [Chuckles.]
- What made you choose them? Shannon: I look good in purple.
So, after I graduated, I met Jordan on the Rez.
Not a lot to do around there, so we buddied up pretty quick.
She offered me a job Chicago winter sucks, so I ditched that internship, and here I am.
Well, we're glad you did.
Anybody that can throw a punch like that is gonna fit right in on the night shift.
Oh-oh! Somebody's in shape.
Nice balls, man.
- All right.
- That was a little hoop action.
Kind of creepy for your desktop.
- These are pictures for my brochure - Uh-huh.
- that I'm opening up a CrossFit gym.
- Uh-huh.
I'm I'm just trying to decide which one I want to use! Go with the big balls! [Indistinct conversations.]
What's the matter, Toph? You okay? Yeah, I just pulled a muscle out in the field.
Just had a scan nothing torn.
- Want me to rub it down for you? - Just stay where you are.
Excuse me.
I'm looking for my son Francis Watkins.
He was brought in with a fever.
Uh I don't see any pediatric fevers on the board.
- You know of any, Kenny? - No, no.
- Are you sure it was this hospital? - Well, yes.
My wife left me a voicemail.
I was at work.
But it's loud machinery, so I just got it.
- Uh - She said she was bringing our 4-year-old son in he had a high fever San Antonio Memorial.
I-I know what I heard.
She was calling from the truck while she was on the way, so A truck? Does she drive a green pickup? Yeah.
That's it F-150.
Why? You sure your son was with her? Yes, she was bringing him in.
That's my point.
Kenny, get the chopper ready to go.
Call police, fire department, EMS.
Get T.
C.
and Jordan on that chopper.
We need everybody out there right now.
Wait.
What What's going on? S-sir, you you might want to sit down for this.
What are you talking about? Your wife was in an accident, and your son may still be at the crash site.
Woman: All units, Route 16.
Possible 4-year-old child in the elements.
Doctors and EMS en route.
[Helicopter blades whirring.]
[Indistinct shouting.]
Man: Let's go! He's already been out here almost two hours! T.
C.
: I can't believe I missed the kid.
Everybody did.
You were here for the mother.
It's not your job to search the field looking for other cases.
All right, everybody spread out! Kenny: Hey, check over there! - I already checked.
- Well, check again! Copy that.
Frankie! - Frankie! - Frankie! - Frankie! Hey, get the chopper to shine its light over there.
I.
V.
is in, major.
We'll get her under in no time.
It's gonna be okay, Sharbat.
We're gonna take care of you and your baby.
- Please find my brother.
- Got it? Man: Let's get the monitor hooked up.
[Indistinct conversations.]
Just got some Intel on her brother.
Looks like he's in the poppy trade.
Well, that's probably the only way they could afford to pay the smugglers.
- It's not like there's any jobs here.
- I hope so.
To be perfectly honest, though, the only thing I care about right now is her.
Marquez: Whoa, Docs.
General Rozenfeld wants to talk to you now.
Did he say about what? Yeah, he's always sharing his inner thoughts with me.
Hit line 2 before it blows up.
[Sighs.]
[Beep.]
- General? - What the hell are you doing? Rozenfeld: I told you to turn that girl over.
Now I hear she's headed to your O.
R.
Did you understand that was a direct order to release her? You are to stop immediately.
Drew: Sir, this is Captain Alister.
She's actually not headed to surgery.
She's already in surgery with Major Jennings.
Why the hell would you do that? I'm gonna stomp your ass so hard Sir, her heart was barely beating.
She would have died.
I felt it was a worse situation to have an Afghan national die on our base, so I started on her.
Then Major Jennings had to step in and help.
If she dies, I'm gonna fry both your asses.
You fix her up and get her off this base ASAP.
Do you understand me?! Yes, sir.
- Major - Don't say a word.
You just lied to a general.
Just get your ass in there and help.
Hey, don't look at me.
- Frankie! - Cover over here! Frankie! Man: I got nothing over here! Hey, Jordan, see that? [Lightning crashes.]
Jordan: Is that a car seat? [Muttering.]
Hey, they find him yet? - No.
- Aw, they will.
No thanks to me.
[Indistinct conversations.]
Hey, y-you couldn't go, man.
You hurt your shoulder.
I-it I-I know you're trying to help make me feel better, Kenny, but it's not helping.
Woman: Lab tech to satellite pharmacy.
- Lab tech to satellite pharmacy.
- Hi.
Okay, look, I-I read your background.
Did a lot of work on the Rez clinic.
Done a lot of things that interns don't normally do until their second year.
I get it.
Doesn't mean you know everything.
I never said I know everything.
Is that your idea of apologizing, because it's not very good.
Apology? Why would I apologize? No, no, I'm I'm just saying that I'm here to help.
All right, so if you have any questions, just ask.
And, uh, if I'm too busy on a shift or something, we can meet before or after work, um, to Are you hitting on me? What? No.
No, no, I was just Dude, don't hit on women in the workplace.
- Whoa.
- That is so unprofessional.
Oh, oh, uh, uh, uh, that's not that's not even where I was going with it.
It was just like I was trying to, like be be like a - I'm messing with you.
- Huh? I had to get even with you for pranking me.
- So had you.
- For a second.
- Found the boy.
Hey, everybody be quiet! Say again.
Man: We found him.
We found the boy.
[Cheers and applause.]
T.
C.
: All right, take him down! He's good right there! Pulse is thready.
He feels hypothermic.
He's not responding.
Okay, we got to get him to the chopper.
- Let's go.
- 1, 2, 3.
- Go! - Go! Opening up the pericardium now.
- Ready with suction.
- Okay, retract.
The general wants an update, Major.
Could go either way.
- Sir, you can't come in.
- Give me my wife! - Get the hell out of here! - You can't do that! She is open on our table.
You're not sterile.
You need to get the hell out of here.
- Not this time.
- Hey, Tommy, call the M.
P.
s.
- Listen, I'm sick of your - [Gun cocks.]
- Give her to me.
- [Man singing indistinctly.]
Okay, all right.
Why don't you just drop it? [Grunting.]
Drew! [Gunshot.]
Drew! [Singing continues.]

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