01x04 - An Occurrence at Randall Kirby's Sink

Episode transcripts for the TV show, "Dr. Death". Aired: July 15, 2021 – present.*
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True crime drama anthology television series based on the podcast of the same name.
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01x04 - An Occurrence at Randall Kirby's Sink

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[DRAMATIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC]



Look, I had my pick of hospitals,

and not just in Texas

around the country.

Around the world, if we're being honest.

- I'm talking about top spinal centers.

-

But the reason I chose UGH

is because I believe in building

something from the ground up

and really entrenching the culture

into the DNA of the hospital,

make sure that every doctor

that walks through those doors after me

knows how to do things the proper way,

'cause I'm gonna change how

we do surgery here in Texas,

bring it into the 21st century.

Rolling out the red carpet for this guy,

offering him heaven and Earth.

Doesn't make any sense.

So what's the plan to deal with

this human hot air balloon?

It's incubating.

Well, we're off to a rollicking start.

I ever tell you the broken arm

story I heard in Landstuhl?

No, and I don't want to hear it now.

It was right after

Operation Phantom Fury.

The Marines got this guy,

Abdul something-or-other.

He and his men had been

leading these guerrilla att*cks

in Afghanistan, took out

a bunch of Humvees.

He's interrogated, doesn't say a word.

They must have had him five, six days.

They get these orders to release him.

Everybody knows he's the bastard

who's been attacking 'em,

but now they gotta let him go.

So you know what they did?

They broke both arms in

four different places,

wrapped him up, sent him on his way.

Never heard from him again.

So you're saying that we

should break Duntsch's arms?

Abso-f*ckin'-lutely.

Before it was his hands,

and now it's his arms?

I'll settle for his fingers.

Oh, my God.

Feel free to share your

nuggets of brilliance.

There's Sasani.

We should go and talk to him.

Discuss our way to justice?

Sexy plan, per usual.

I'm more than happy

to do this on my own.

Lead the way.

A city with a thriving

medical community.

But in looking around, UG

wanted to find a niche,

areas where we could specialize,

provide quality health care for

those who don't have millions

Congratulations, bud.

You wanted a neurosurgeon,

you hired a Neanderthal.

[CHUCKLES]

This is Dr. Randall Kirby.

We were in med school together.

- Mm.

- Been a kidder all his life.

- Ever the kidder.

- Now may we talk in private?

Well, we want to stick around,

sing like canaries so

everybody can hear.

La-la-la-la-la!

Please come with me.

Dr. Kirby, would you grab

me a cocktail, a margarita,

spicy, with one of those

little umbrellas in it?

So I take it you heard about Duntsch.

- I've only heard good things.

- [CHUCKLES]

I've got X-rays of his handiwork

in the trunk of my car.

I could pass them out

as party favors here.

Thought you were supposed

to be the nice one.

That's funny.

He received a clean letter from Baylor.

There was no negative

reports from Dallas Medical,

nothing in the National

Practitioner's Data Bank.

- You've got to fire him.

- On what grounds?

Whatever grounds you come up with.

UGH isn't Baylor-Plano.

We don't have investors

lined up at the door.

Hate to be crass, but

the average neurosurgeon

is worth $2.4 million in revenue.

Our entire mission is to

provide affordable health care

to low-income patients

who've been turned away

by every other hospital in the city.

Duntsch is not the only game in town.

I just hired him.

If I fire him without incident,

I'll be facing a lawsuit.

So morality equals,

what, dollars and cents?

If you've got some kind of

personal vendetta against him,

that's your matter, not mine.

And you'd better be

prepared to be called

the surgeon that turns

against his colleagues.

Now, I would have expected that

kind of behavior from Kirby,

but not from someone of your stature.

[OPERA MUSIC PLAYING]

[INDISTINCT CHATTER]



- Oh!

- Oh, I'm so sorry.

Oh.

So

so was he fired or was

he allowed to resign?

That's confidential, Dr. Henderson.

Your hospital did not report him

to the Texas Medical Board.

You did not report him to the Data Bank.

He had temporary privileges.

So you weren't required to.

You called me to perform the

revision surgery on Mrs. Beyer.

- Yes, I did.

- So you saw firsthand

what he did to her, what

he did to Dorothy Burke.

And after all that, Dallas

Medical let him walk away.

They were untoward outcomes,

and we did what we thought was best.

Except for the patients.

Every neurosurgeon makes

mistakes, Dr. Henderson.

Have you had complications

in your career?

Someday the untoward

outcome could be your own.

And you wouldn't want a rogue doctor

breaking up your welcome party.



I'll have a sh*t of whatever's

closest to your hand.



I think I figured it out.

You wanted him under

an exclusive contract

with your hospital.

Someone like Duntsch,

from a program like Semmes-Murphey,

he's the perfect target.

Not only is he marketable,

but Baylor makes a profit off

of every procedure he performs.

So if the hospital makes

significantly more money

from the ones it owns as

opposed to the doctors

who only have privileges,

then it is about the g*dd*mn

bottom line in the end, am I right?



- Got a minute?

- Oh, yes, sir. Please. Sit.

You told me you were going to stop him.

What are you doing here?

They're throwing a party for him.

Well, I know you're

frustrated, and so am I,

but I've got it under control.

Under control? How, exactly?

- There's a process.

- What process?

Mrs. Beyer could have d*ed.

Dorothy Burke did, she d*ed.

And how about that hole in

Elaine Johnson's esophagus?

Hey, whatever it is you think

you're gonna accomplish today,

I guarantee you it's not gonna work.

I've used every tool in this system

available to me to stop him.

I contacted the Medical Board.

I filed a report. I talked with Skadden.

And you've accomplished nothing, Robert.

All of the mechanisms that are in place

to deal with these problems have failed.

Your system has failed.

I've always respected you.

I thought you were a man

of high moral standing,

but you're just another

spoke in the wheel.



[OPERA MUSIC ECHOING]



Do I know you?

We never met.

Hmm.

You look so familiar.

Just one of those faces, I guess.



I know you.

Well, I am the man of the hour.

Mind passing me a towel?

I'm out over here.



[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]

Dr. Christopher Duntsch.

Robert Henderson.



Robert Henderson.



Robert Henderson.



[SNAPS FINGERS]



You're the one who turned me

in to the Texas Medical Board.

I am.

[TAKES DEEP BREATH]

You came for me, and I'm still here.

Why is that?

Well, I can't figure out if

you're just incompetent

or you're doing all this on purpose,

and that makes you insane.

Did you know that people

used to say that Nikola Tesla

was possessed by demons?

Regular folk had to come

up with a negative label

'cause they just couldn't

comprehend his genius.

I've gone over all of your cases,

and I don't see any

signs of genius at all.

That's because you're

staring into the sun.

My surgeries were perfect.

Every one.

Now, circulating nurses, X-ray techs,

administrators, they can

all be so distracting.

We've all had complications, right?

Even you, Robert.

Woodland Arp comes to mind, doesn't he?



It's all so human, isn't it?

You look at someone like me,

someone younger, smarter,

more capable,

just filling up all the spaces,

sucking up all the oxygen.

And then there's you.

Tired, old, weak.



I'm gonna revoke your medical license.



Well, sh*t. You can try.

Maybe you'll even succeed.

But if you take my license in Texas,

there's still 49 other states.

Hell, there's an entire world out there.

And everybody's looking

for a good surgeon

with good credentials.



But if you come for me,

you better be ready for

what I'm gonna do to you.

I will take your money.

I will take your career.

I will take what little

reputation you've ever had.



You want to hit me?



Go ahead, Robert.

I'm right here.



That's what I thought. You don't

[DRAMATIC OPERA MUSIC]



[DISTANT POUNDING]



[DISTANT POUNDING]

[KNOCK AT DOOR] Hey!

If you need a plunger,

there's one under the sink.



We're not going to

Duntsch's welcome party.

Come on, you gotta be sh1tting me.

- What the hell happened in here?

- It's not gonna work.

We've exhausted every possibility.



So what do you wanna do?

You wanna roll over on your back,

put your little paws up in the air?

[UPBEAT DISCO MUSIC]



[HEART MONITOR BEEPING]

- Afternoon.

- Good afternoon, Doctor.

Everyone in here today get a

chance to meet Dr. Duntsch?

- Welcome, Dr. Duntsch.

- I just wanna say how thankful I am

to have each and every

one of you on my team.

Today, we're gonna do a

TLIF at the L4-L5 level.

It's gonna be challenging

for me to do a surgery

from over here, Dr. Duntsch.

Perhaps you'd allow me to

squeeze in right there,

since you're assisting.

Scalpel.

Scalpel.

I'm gonna need a scalpel, Dr. Duntsch.

[HEART MONITOR BEEPING]

I thought that you were going

to be observing my surgeries.

Why is that?

Because that's what you

told me in my interview.

Oh, well, apologies for

your misunderstanding.

Bovie.

I didn't [CLEARS THROAT]

- misunderstand anything.

- If it's all the same to you,

we should have this

conversation at a later,

more appropriate time, Dr. Duntsch.

Retractor.

How long until I'm doing

my own surgeries?

Well, I guess we're having

this conversation right now.

Dr. Sompura is one of

my finest surgeons.

He assisted me for three years,

plus an additional two years

under my supervision

prior to his performing solo procedures.

Five years? I graduated top of my class.

Oh, I'm quite aware of

your qualifications.

You've reminded me several times.

That's why you were hired.

This is where you hone

your education to skills.

I need to concentrate.

So if you're not prepared to assist,

please step outside.

I can finish on my own. Suction, please.

[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]



You don't need to worry about it.

He just wants you to get

your sea legs under you.

[DRILL WHIRRING]

It makes sense.

[DRILL WHIRRING]

[SIGHS] Come on down here and let's eat.

You're the one who is

so desperately hungry.

- Yeah, I'm almost done.

- What do you want?

- The chow mein or the fried rice?

- [DRILL WHIRRING]

Looks good. Um, Kung Pao.

We need to get the fish t*nk started.

I was thinking something exotic.

You should be writing this stuff down.

I'm eating.

We need art for the walls as well.

Expensive art.

From that uh, damn.

What's the name of that fancy gallery?

- Um, the mall guy? Kinkade?

- No. No. The mall guy.

Sotheby's.

We need at least two or three

pieces of art from Sotheby's.

And I want you to coordinate

with Jerry about the floors

'cause I don't want any of

that cheap-ass vinyl sh*t.

I want it wall-to-wall marble.

I want the patients to feel

like they're walking on glass.

Is that okay for people with bad backs?

Because I want the patients

wowing when they come in.

You know, like they just

walked into Graceland.

You sure you wanna do

all this right away?

- It's gonna get expensive quick.

- Wendy, when a patient is choosing

between me and Dr. O'Connor

with a boring office,

who do you think they're

gonna choose, okay?

Which one are they going to remember?

Trust me, it's gonna pay for itself.

And I don't need to get my sea legs.

What?

I know how to operate.

- I get it.

- So f*ck Bishara.

f*ck Bishara.

You ever thought of nursing school?

No.

I thought that was

every stripper's dream,

to pay for nursing school.

I don't do that anymore.

I'm not saying it in a bad way.

I just think you have potential.

I think you're amazing.

You're smart, smarter

than half the nurses

I've ever worked with.

What?

Okay, then if not nursing, then what?

What is it that you want to do?

Honestly?

I just want to be a mom.

[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]

Making school lunches,

giving them those cute, little

fruit cups for their snack

or

I don't know, maybe

even homeschool them.



I know it's old-fashioned,

but my Aunt Josephine,

the one that lives in Ferris,

she did it, and all of her kids

are in college now, so



I just [SIGHS]



What?

I guess I just thought you had

so much more potential, you know?



You know, I think you're amazing.

You're basically the pinnacle

of human evolution.

Two X chromosomes. Plus, you're smart.

You keep telling me I'm smart

like you're trying to convince

yourself that I am.

I'm trying to be supportive.

- It feels manipulative.

- Manipulative?

You didn't say anything

about me becoming a nurse

when we were in Memphis.

And now all of a sudden we're here

- I'm just trying to help you out.

- You got this fancy new clinic

- You're blowing this way out of proportion.

- And you're trying to force me

to go to nursing school.

Don't point your fork at me!

Are you embarrassed by me, Chris?

Of course not. I'm just

making a suggestion.

I'm just trying to help you out.



Wendy, come on. Just

- No. It's fine.

- Okay. Hey.



You know what? You're right. I'm sorry.

Forget I said anything. I just

I'm wrong. I'm sorry.



[WHISPERING] I'm sorry.

[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]



I'm sorry.



Where do you see yourself in five years?

[LAUGHS]

What's next? "What's

my greatest weakness?"

That was gonna be my third question.

[TAKES DEEP BREATH]

When I was looking for

space for my clinic,

I saw this vacant, eight-story

building over on Frankford.

It wasn't much, needs a lot of work,

but I want to turn it

into a multibillion-dollar

neurosurgical center.

Everything state-of-the-art

and all in-house.

Diagnostics, surgery,

PT, nutrition, the works.

In five years?

Meteoric rise, wouldn't you say?

I thought that was a

conservative estimate.

Fortunately for MISI,

Dr. Skadden didn't lock you up.

Dr. Skadden is an amazing doctor

and a great friend and mentor.

And for sure,

the easy path for me would

have been to stay in Memphis.

But I wanted to challenge

myself, expand my horizons.

Plus, I was getting recruited

from New York, San Diego,

even UCLA.

How do you like working

with Dr. Bishara?

He has a very particular

way of doing things.

I know he's partial to

keeping the training wheels

on all his surgeons.

It would be nice to be

doing my own surgeries.

Sure. Otherwise, what's the point

of paying you all that money?

MISI is a fine institution.

And please don't take

this the wrong way,

but I think for someone

of your pedigree,

it's a step backwards.

You've studied under some of

the best surgeons in the world.

Your work at DiscGenics

seems groundbreaking.

You've been in contact with DiscGenics.

We reached out.

[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]

They said you stepped away from

your day-to-day obligations,

but you're still a board member.



Lucky for us, you did.

You should join the Baylor family.

We're better suited for you than MISI.

[CHUCKLES]

Well, MISI recruited me.

I guess that call from Baylor

must have got lost in the mail.

That was our mistake.

I admit it.

But the timing couldn't

be more perfect for you.

We're in the process

of new accreditation.

The plan is to offer an even wider array

of surgical services.

We're expanding our network

of hospitals around Texas

and need to recruit top

surgeons to handle the influx.

So from my perspective,

you're central to our plans,

and we can be to yours.

I'm under contract.

If your hesitation is about

the 600,000 advance

MISI gave you,

I wouldn't worry about it.

Well, I don't exactly have

that kind of money just laying around.

We have a relationship with Frost Bank.

They can set you up with

a loan to help pay it off

and cover the expenses

associated with opening a clinic.

I'm still not seeing the fine print.

I'm gonna lift the velvet

rope for you, okay?

You're gonna be successful here.

Whatever you need,

just make it known to me.

We have marketing consultants

to help build your brand,

expand your business.

Obviously, we can't

point patients your way,

but we help you draw them in.

If everything goes as I imagine it will,

one day, you'll be chief

of neurological surgery.

[SIGHS]



I can't be married to

just one institution.

I have to be free to

pursue my own interests.

Seems to me you're

looking for a springboard

to launch your career.

What better place to do

that than Big Baylor?



One day, your name's gonna be up there

for all the world to see.



I assume you're a sports fan?



[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]

- America's Snoretime.

- Come on, Jerry.

This was very generous.

You said she had a picture

of Cuban in her office?

- Mm-hmm.

- Think she can score

tickets to the Mavs in the fall?

Oh, beer's me.

- Salty Jack is the lady.

- Dom for me.

To Baylor.

You're taking the job, Chrissy.

You're definitely taking the job.

- I don't know yet, Jer.

- Come on, horsey.

This is the biggest no-brainer

since brains were invented.

Dude, you're Baylor's

number-one draft pick,

and you even have the

arm candy to prove it.

Are you flirting with me, Jerry?

You're out of my league, but it's okay.

One day, I'll find my Wendy.

When you find the right girl,

all the strip clubs in Dallas

are gonna go out of business.

- [CHUCKLES]

- Truth.

But seriously,

dude, do you have any idea how much

Baylor's gonna make off of you?

Those billboards, all that

sh*t generates business.

They don't put any punk-ass

doctor up on there,

only the superstars.

Wendy, can I get an amen?

- I don't get it.

- Get what?

The billboard, this box, the everything.

It just seems fast, is all.

Not fast enough for my boy-genius.

He's got that Brad Pitt thing going on.

[CHUCKLES] Well, pump the brakes.

Your boy's a lot of things,

but he's not Brad Pitt.

- Ooh. Ouch, a hater.

- I'm just asking.

Wendy, when life gives you lemonade,

don't make f*cking lemons.

The more surgeries Chris does,

the more elite he becomes,

the more money they generate.

I don't even have the

clinic up and running yet.

And I still have to hire a

PA. Still need my Bonnie.

Dr. Bishara sent over a

list of recommendations.

I'll start setting up

interviews in the morning.

- Jerry on the spot.

- Okay.

So I was gonna wait until we had

the articles of incorporation,

but screw it.

- Did you make this?

-

Yeah.

I love it.

- Really?

- It's so good, Jerry.

- [CHUCKLES] Thanks.

- You know, that reminds me,

I haven't hired a

marketing director yet.

You know, someone to promote the clinic.

- I'll put a list together.

- No. You know what?

- I think I found the guy.

- Word.

Give me his contact

info. I'll reach out.

Mm. Okay, so his name

is Jerry Summers.

[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]

You f*cking with me?

Oh, my God. Are you serious?

- You just got a promotion!

- Holy sh*t, dude!

Oh, my God. I won't

let you down. I swear.

I'll make cards,

I'll make flyers, everything.

I've even got this dope-ass

idea for a k*ller website,

got a guy who can build it.

- That's what I like to hear.

- So

Baylor?

What's it gonna be, Chrissy?

You gonna nut up or what?

Here's to Jerry Summers,

Executive Marketing Director,

and here's to Baylor-Plano, b*tches!

- Whoo!

- Yeah!



-

- [WATER TRICKLING]

[TOOTHBRUSH SCRAPING]

[SPITS]

- Hey.

- Hey.

We're supposed to have

lunch with Dr. Isaacs today.

But one of my procedures

got rescheduled,

so can you call him and

tell him I'm gonna be late?

And Medtronics was gonna

deliver all their screws.

I might not be back in time; if I'm not,

can you just sign for it and

have them leave all there?

- Mm-hmm.

- Great.

What's up? What's wrong?

[CHUCKLES]

What is it, Wendy?

- What?

- [CHUCKLES]

B-A-B-Y.

[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]



Are you serious?

How?

A stork f*cked me.



Are you sure?

- I took a test. Twice.

- Well [SIGHS]

They give false positives.

That could be a bad batch.



Okay.



- You're not happy?

- [SIGHS]

Of course I am. It's just big news.

Honestly, I'm a little hungover today.

And I can't be late, but I

am over the moon with joy.

When I get back, we can celebrate.

[DOOR CLICKS, CREAKS]



[DOOR SLAMS]



[SERGE GAINSBOURG'S "COULEUR CAFÉ"]

[LAID-BACK JAZZ MUSIC]



♪ J'aime ta couleur café ♪

♪ Tes cheveux café ♪

♪ Ta gorge café ♪

♪ J'aime quand pour moi tu danses ♪

♪ Alors j'entends murmurer ♪

♪ Tous tes bracelets ♪

♪ Jolis bracelets ♪

♪ A tes pieds ils se balancent ♪

♪ Couleur café ♪

♪ Que j'aime ta couleur café ♪

♪ C'est quand même fou l'effet ♪

♪ L'effet que ça fait ♪

- De te voir rouler ♪

♪ Ainsi des yeux et des hanches ♪

- Si tu fais comme le café ♪

♪ Rien qu'à m'énerver ♪

- Rien qu'à m'exciter ♪

♪ Ce soir la nuit sera blanche ♪

♪ Couleur café ♪

♪ Que j'aime ta couleur café ♪



[SAXOPHONE SOLO]



- L'amour sans philosopher ♪

♪ C'est comm' le café ♪

- Très vite passé ♪

- Mais que veux tu que j'y fasse ♪

- On en a marre de café ♪

- Et c'est terminé ♪

♪ Pour tout oublier ♪

♪ On attend que ça se tasse ♪

♪ Couleur ♪

[DOOR SLAMS]

You have a doctorate.

- Mind if I call you doctor?

- Kim will do.

[CHUCKLES]

You last worked for Dr. George Clondike,

but only for a couple months. Why?

- Know him?

- No. I'm new in town.

He's an ortho-oncologist and an ass,

and that's the nicest thing

I can say about him.

[CHUCKLES] What happened?

Uh

I'm not even trying

to get into all that,

but it was a sh*t-show.

Pardon my French.

So I quit and went straight

to Padre for some R&R.

And Dr. Bishara called and told me

you were looking for a

physician's assistant.

Yes, he speaks very highly of you.

I just do my job very well.

You also worked for a

neurosurgeon before.

- How was that experience?

- We got divorced.

You married your neurosurgeon?

Interesting.

They're not that interesting.

You just haven't met the right one yet.

So what happened?

- What happened with what?

- You said you got divorced.

Are you asking why I'm

not working with him

or why I got divorced?

Why you got divorced.

Sounds like an unprofessional question

for a professional interview.

You're the one that brought it up.

It got stale.

I needed excitement in my life.

Buy one, get one at Target.

[CHUCKLES SOFTLY]

So what do you know about me?

You graduated top of your class

from University of Tennessee

where you received a PhD and MD.

While in the program, you also

became the majority shareholder

and Chief Science Officer at DiscGenics.

The research you've done on stem cells

is gonna change the face of

spinal surgery as we know it.

At least according to you.

[CHUCKLES]

Yeah, I don't sleep much.

My philosophy on the current

state of neurosurgery

is that it's primitive.

It is, of course,

every surgeon's goal never to operate.

But so long as humans have bodies,

spinal surgeries are gonna be necessary.

I want to modernize it.

What's the point of

removing a diseased disc

if you can use a stem

cell to regenerate it?

You're either really

smart or really crazy,

but if you pull it off,

that's one hell of an achievement.

So how is that for interesting?

I'll give you my answer

if I get the job.

[CHUCKLES]

You see, that's why I need a

PA who can keep up with me.

'Cause I'm like the "USS Enterprise"

moving at warp speed eight,

and I need a Number One

who can help me navigate the ship.

I don't know what any of that means,

but I'll give you this one for free.

Your clinic is being run

by a bunch of dummies.

And who is this guy?

Jerry Summers,

uh, Executive Director of Marketing.

So what do you do, like,

hand out flyers or something?

Well, yeah.

But I'm also his website

guy. I'm building it.

Not my personal self, but I hired a guy.

So you're the website guy,

but not the website guy.

- I'm the guy that

- Jerry helps out around the office.

Okay, so you got this

fake website marketing guy,

and I'm sorry but not sorry

your front desk girl is rude

and doesn't have basic office etiquette.

Her name is Wendy Young,

- and she's a pretty good

- She's a temp.

She was with us in Memphis

and wanted to move to Dallas

to be closer to her husband.

But don't worry, she's pregnant.

She's not gonna be here very long.

You need at least two

people working the desk.

One to do phones and scheduling,

the other to handle

all the intake stuff.

I know a couple of girls

that'll be perfect.

And, dude, those construction guys

are not gonna be done before you open.

- [BOTH CHUCKLE]

- I get it.

You're a whip.

You're the type of person

who's gonna come in here

and make this place work.

[INHALES DEEPLY]

I'm more like a hammer.

[DUNTSCH LAUGHS]

But I get what you're saying.

My references are on the second page.

You can call any of them and

they'll tell you the same thing.

You know, I'm more of a gut guy.

I used to play football back

in college, all-American.

Coach was always telling us,

the one thing in the world

that will never lie to

you, your instincts.

That's kind of how I operate.

[DRAMATIC AMBIENT MUSIC]

So what's your instinct telling you?



- She's a stone-cold bitch.

- I like her.

Doesn't bother you she was

married to her neurosurgeon?

She gives off that money-digger vibe.

- Gold digger.

- Mm, money digger.

No one digs for gold anymore.

When were you gonna

tell me about the baby?

You know, just didn't come up.

Well, that's great news.

You, Wendy, baby.

I'm happy for you all.

Why did you say all

that sh*t about Wendy?

What sh*t?

She's just a temp,

she's married to some guy in Memphis?



"Oh, hello, Dr. Morgan.

"Welcome to our

state-of-the-art facility.

"For your information,

"our secretary used to be a stripper.

Would you still be interested

in the position?"

She's about to be your baby mama.

Who cares if she was a stripper?

Some of the best people

I know are strippers.

Huh. Everybody you know is a stripper.

Besides,

Kim said she had two other

candidates for the positions.

Chris, you know me.

I've always been supportive.

Don't f*ck it up with Wendy.

What is that supposed to mean?

I mean, it was just me and my mom,

you know, my whole life. No dad.

And now I see it, this woman

- Jerry.

- She's coming in all hot to trot.

Jerry, I'm not leaving Wendy, okay?

And I'm not leaving the baby, okay?

Kim is ambitious, she's confident,

she has an impressive résumé,

and I need the best

people working for me.



Kim's my physician's assistant.



[SOFTLY] Okay.



-

- [VIDEOGAME CONTROLLER CLACKING]

[g*nf*re AND EXPLOSIONS]

- Mm-mm, mm-mm. Not now, not now.

- When are we gonna talk?

Babe, not now. No! Not now.

No, I don't give a sh*t.

We're having a baby.

And you haven't said a word about it.

[SIGHS]

Fine.

If you wanna talk, let's talk.

You don't want to have this baby?

[SIGHS]

We've only been together

a couple months, Wendy.

Sorry if I'm not lighting cigars.

So that's it? "Wham, bam,

thank you, ma'am"?

No.

Look, I don't expect

you to fully grasp this,

but everything that I'm doing

will help you live past

your wildest dreams.

I have a plan.

All I need is for you to

go to nursing school.

You f*cking kidding me?

I'm not an accessory

- in Chris's world.

- [SIGHS] Wendy, give me a break.

You had no problem playing the

role of doctor's girlfriend,

but now when it's not working for you,

all of a sudden it's an issue?

Nothing with you has ever worked for me.

- It's always been on your terms.

- Oh, bullshit.

That is f*cking bullshit, Wendy.

[SLAMS CONTROLLER]

I wanted to go to UCLA;

that was my first choice,

but you're the one that

said you wouldn't move

unless we came to Dallas

because of your aunt in Ferris.

So don't pretend like it's been me

just dragging you along

for this whole ride.

- You're blaming me?

- Oh, Jesus!

Can you not play the victim?

Just try it. See what happens.

You're the one who wanted a boyfriend

who could buy your shoes and

your perfume and your makeup

and pay your rent and

whatever the f*ck else.

And you know what?

Congratulations, you got it.

You won in life.

You got what you wanted.

But life is a double-edged

f*cking sword.

This is what it's like to

date a god. Keep up.

You might be able to hustle these

stuffy, buttoned-up assholes,

but not me. I know you're a fraud,

always acting like you know

everything, but you don't.

You can't even keep a job.

[TENSE MUSIC]

What the f*ck does that mean?

They dumped your ass out of DiscGenics.

I'm on the board!

"On the board" means

they're too embarrassed

- by you to fire you!

- I made $1/2 million

just by stepping foot in this city!

And everything that you

have is because of me!

I picked you up out

of the f*cking gutter,

and I can throw you right

back there if I want.

You'll end up some sagging hussy

working the pole for chump change.

And you know what? If I'm

being perfectly honest,

the best thing you could probably do

is abort that f*cking baby,

because you are not the type

of person who can raise it.

And I'm saying that with love

because I am trying to

help you win in life!

- f*ck you!

- f*ck you!

[GLASS SHATTERS]

f*ck you!

[GLASS SHATTERS]

- f*ck you!

- [DOOR SLAMS]

- Hey, open this open the

- f*ck you!

- f*ck!

- Tex-Mex, y'all. Hey!

- Open this door!

- f*ck you, Chris! f*ck you!

- Ungrateful bitch!

- Hey! What the f*ck?

- Open up!

- Get out!

- Open the f*ck up!

- Hey, shut the f*ck up! Both of you.

- Get out!

- Get out of my g*dd*mn hotel room!

- Get him out of here!

- You need to calm down.

- Get him out!

- f*ck.

- All right. Cool it, bro.

- Get off of me!

- Cool it, bro.

- Get off of me!

All right. What the hell happened?

[MUFFLED] Hey, we have

to talk about this, okay?



[BREATHES SHAKILY]

[SNIFFS DEEPLY]

Oh, f*ck.



Ah, f*ck.

Oh, f*ck.



[CLEARS THROAT]

[SIGHS]



[EXHALES DEEPLY]

Hopefully, in the future, you stay away

from whatever unsavory

character did this to you.

[CHUCKLES]

I did it to myself.



You don't care to share, fine by me.

Let's not kick this new phase

of our relationship off

[GROANS]

with an untruth.



New phase?



Articles of incorporation

for the Texas Neurosurgical Institute.

You're officially official, Dr. Duntsch.

[SIGHS]

[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]



Clinic's up and running,

- got a gnarly man scar.

- [CHUCKLES]

So much to make whoopee about.



Classy.



Most people are so close-minded

so narrowly focused on their

tiny, little cocooned worlds

that they don't even understand

the greatness that I am offering them.

But that's okay,

because if I have to stand in

front of them a thousand times

to explain my genius to them

to make them understand

then it's all worth it.

And it starts at Baylor.

I am going to make them understand.



And this isn't the unstoppable

force paradox,

because there's only me.

I embody everything.



And what am I looking at here?

A screw imbedded in soft tissue.

- He missed the spine entirely.

-

If what you're telling

me is to be believed,

then it seems to me that this

is a case of incompetence.

[CHUCKLES] I can train a

couple of circus monkeys

to do a better job.

How do you like your

steak, Mr. Yarborough?

- Do I feel an analogy coming on?

- Mm.

Texan born and bred.

When you slice into that

perfect rare to bloody steak,

it's soft, like you're cutting

through a stick of butter.

Now, if somebody stuck a

piece of wood into that steak,

when your Kn*fe made contact,

you'd be able to tell

the difference, correct?

Of course.

Well, the contrast between

the wood and the steak

is the same as the spine and

the muscles surrounding it.

And Duntsch couldn't

tell the difference?

Which is a damn near impossibility

unless he was actively

trying to insert the screw

in the wrong place, which

would answer your questions

about showing criminal intent.

To bring criminal charges,

a certain threshold has to be met.

I'm not sure we're there.

What's evident, though, is it appears

you have a compelling medical

malpractice complaint,

which should be taken up in civil court.

But pushing this off to

the civil court, I mean,

if that isn't passing the buck,

I don't know what is.

We're dancing in a field of gray.

This office deals with drug

dealers and murderers.

The law is explicit.

Don't sell dr*gs, don't k*ll.

It's an undeviating line

any jury can follow.

What you're presenting me is

eight years of medical school

that we'd have to shove

down the jury's throats

in a handful of days.

They'd have to be so versed to the point

that they could differentiate

between sound medical practice

and criminal negligence.

I don't think it would

be that hard for them

to understand the scope

of what he's done.

We're not asking the

jury to perform surgery.

Well, tell that to juror number seven,

who doesn't wanna be there

'cause she's losing

valuable days at work,

and her kids' Christmas wish

list is going up in smoke.

Duntsch has two deaths that we know of,

and the state of Texas has

ex*cuted people for less.

I'm not negating what has transpired.

But you're asking us to start

up a very steep mountain.

Ah, well, you know,

the degree of difficulty

shouldn't dictate how

you do your g*dd*mn job,

otherwise we should all be

selling hot dogs at a ballgame.

[CLEARS THROAT] I had a patient once.

Woodland Arp, very successful

lumbar spine fusion,

recovered nicely for six months.

Then he started having

recurring back pain in the area

where the device was implanted.

And by then, the fusion was intact,

so Mr. Arp decided to have

the hardware removed

to alleviate the discomfort.

Straightforward, neat procedure.

35 minutes, skin to skin,

got the hardware out.

I rounded on him later

on; he was on his feet,

walking around, no pre-op pain.

He was ecstatic.

The next morning, they found

him dead on the bathroom floor.

Pulmonary embolism.

I did nothing wrong.

I did everything by the book,

and not a week goes by

that I don't think about him.

Now, whether he's doing

it on purpose or not,

Duntsch knows that he is

not a competent surgeon.

That's intent.

And what's gonna happen

if people find out

that you had an

opportunity to stop him

but you didn't take it?

George, take the lead on this.

We'll conduct a thorough investigation

and see where the evidence leads us.

[THREE 6 MAFIA'S "95"]

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ n*gga recognize the Triple 6 sh*t ♪

♪ It's so f*ckin' thick ♪

♪ We gotta lay it down we gotta spray ♪

♪ We gotta break ya, bitch ♪

♪ Comin' up stays on my mind ♪

♪ So we gotta drop a busta ♪

A playa-hatin' n*gga or

♪ a crooked cop, run up ♪

♪ If ya wanna ♪

♪ It ain't no thang I put my g*n up ♪

♪ Midnight to sun up ♪

♪ Still break you mane in that M ♪

♪ The M-Town ♪

♪ n*gg*s get buck non-stop ♪

♪ f*ck off and learn the real meaning ♪

- Of a plastic Glock ♪

- G ♪

- Gotta touch 'em, gotta grab 'em ♪

♪ 'Cause I think he's bailin' ♪

- L ♪

- Lay 'em down ♪

♪ No remorse come with me to hell ♪

- O ♪

- Overnight ♪

♪ We be rich when we tell the trick ♪

- C ♪

- Catch ya slippin' ♪

♪ He's so soft, do a man quick ♪

- K ♪

- Killas on my payroll ♪

- I gotta stay straight ♪

- 19 ♪

Ready to rock?

f*ck yeah.

Next stop,

Baylor-f*cking-Plano Hospital.

♪ We down to break da law, bitch ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

Comin up from the back

♪ buckin' n*gg*s down ♪

♪ Comin, comin up from the back ♪

♪ Buckin' n*gg*s down ♪

Comin up from the back

♪ buckin' n*gg*s down ♪

'Cause when you duck,

♪ we hit you with the bat ♪

♪ Pass me tha Glock so I can get buck ♪

A mean frown stay on my face

♪ 'cause I don't give a f*ck ♪

♪ Loced out Afro ♪

♪ And a big Fila coat ♪

♪ 14 karat gold ♪

♪ Smile and a bone around my throat ♪

Glock 19 is tucked nicely

♪ down my Fruit of the Looms ♪

♪ For them n*gg*s that trick it in ♪

I'm stickin' up them

tracks they boom ♪

Shakin' like a mothafucka

♪ when I lock you down tight ♪

In the Chevy trunk

♪ with nothin' but next ♪

♪ To dig for yo life ♪

♪ Fool it ain't no game ♪

♪ You gotta die the devil sent me ♪

♪ Six in yo chest who's next? ♪

♪ No niceness in me ♪

Tha killas up in my

♪ crew they take no sh*t ♪

♪ n*gg*s you better run ♪

We 'bout it bitch,

♪ no n*gga, don't play ♪

♪ We roll with a*t*matic g*ns ♪

♪ Step up with the ho sh*t ♪

♪ n*gga we gotta close shop ♪

Juice on the burglar do a

♪ 9 leavin' you hos to rot ♪

♪ Big cam with a punk ♪

♪ Malekie with a attitude ♪

♪ Smith & Wesson in his hand ♪

♪ Blowed tha bitch out his shoes ♪

- Break da law ♪

- Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

♪ Break da law, break da law ♪

- Break da law ♪

- South Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- North Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- West Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- East Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- South Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- North Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- West Side ♪

- Break da law ♪

- East Side ♪

♪ Get buck, mothafucka ♪

♪ Get buck ♪

♪ Get buck, mothafucka ♪

♪ Get buck ♪

♪ Get buck, mothafucka ♪

♪ Get buck ♪

♪ Get buck, mothafucka, get ♪
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