07x20 - End of the Day, Anything Can Happen

Episode transcripts for the TV show "Chicago Med". Aired: November 2015 to present.*
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"Chicago Med" follows the day-to-day chaos of the city's most expl*sive hospital and its staff as they tackle unique new cases inspired by topical events. Intertwines with "Chicago Fire" and "Chicago PD".
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07x20 - End of the Day, Anything Can Happen

Post by bunniefuu »

This guy says we've never met before,

but there's something about him
that seemed familiar.

There.

I remember when this was taken.

So you two were close?

Your father never wanted you to know.

We were in love.

There's a blue Impala.

Been idling there for, like, minutes.

You're being paranoid.

This woman has very strong ties

with the Serbian mob.

We can't do this. It's not safe.

Milena, wait.

Vasik settled with the feds?

Well, there's still some
state and criminal cases

going forward, but...

You've been awarded $ . million.

My offer's been accepted,
buying that building.

Oat milk, huh?

Mm, it's supposed to be
better for the environment.

But still getting it in
a disposable cup, so...

A bit of a wash.

Small talking about coffee.

We've become those coworkers.

We could always talk about work.

Pulled a LEGO out
of a patient's nose last night.

Oh, that's exciting stuff.

The patient was years old.

- Oh.
- Dr. Halstead.

Pleasant surprise.

The infamous Dr. Hannah Asher.

The infamous Dr. Matthew Cooper.

Hi, how are you?

Um, wow.

You are looking quite well.

It must be that new landlord glow.

Congrats, by the way.

The apartment buildings
in Canaryville, right?

That's right.

The old homestead.

I love that.

It's nice to see someone
came out ahead in all this.

What are you doing here, Matt?

Getting the old ticker checked,

making sure I'm in
fighting shape for the trial.

[CHUCKLES]

Anyway, I got to run.

I look forward to seeing you in court.

All right, take care, man.

Bye.

What a d*ck.

You didn't tell me that you bought
an apartment building.

- Hey, Doc Scott.
- Hey.

Stefan. You all right, man?

Something up with your g*nsh*t recovery?

No, I'm cool. You did me right.

That's why I'm here, actually.

Sung your praises to my boss.

Now he needs your help.

Your boss?

Oh, well.

You know, I caught
your case by chance, man.

I'm a pediatrician.

Really? That's even better.

It's actually my boss's daughter
who isn't feeling well.

Okay, um, well,
tell him to bring her in.

- I'll take a look.
- Sorry, Doc.

Boss doesn't work that way.

Oh, a... a house call. Okay.

Um, let me text my boss and
tell him I'm going to be late.

No. It's no problem.

You can do that from the car.

[TENSE MUSIC]



We meet again.



Thank you.

Um, you know, it's Crockett with an R.

[HONKING]

Help. I need help.

Hey, hey, hey.
I'm a doctor. Are you hurt?

Not me. My grandson Zeke.

Backseat.

Hey, bud.

Stretcher! Hey!

I need a stretcher.

Hey, talk to me, bud. What's going on?

My belly hurts.

This might hurt a little, okay?

He has liver disease,
autoimmune hepatitis.

This morning, he woke up so sick.

We got here as fast as we could.

Okay, put your arm around me.

Oh, God.

Please don't let it be too late.

Why don't you call an ambulance?

We were outside the city, and they only

serve the local hospitals.

Okay. Get him into the ED.

I'll be right there, okay?

We've been to all of them.
They won't help.

Just help my grandson.

You're his last hope.



Zeke Belkin, fulminant liver failure.

Transplant status, A.

His time is running out, and his
grandmother, Celeste, knows it.

She tried to donate a portion
of her liver to save him,

got turned down.

So they're coming
to ask for a second opinion?

Well, more like a fifth opinion.

These are Celeste's medical records.

Blood type and anatomy
are a match to Zeke, so...

She's years old,
overweight, type diabetes,

high blood pressure.

Her labs are terrible.

Yeah, and the kid's only years old.

No.

No, no. This hospital too?

I'm sorry, Ms. Belkin.

But I've been exercising, eating better.

I'm stronger than I was before.

I'm the only family Zeke has.

Please.

Run the donor screening test again.

Okay.

We will.

Just hang tight, and we'll
have a nurse come by

and get things started, okay?

Thank you.

I feel for them, too, Crockett,

but what you just did wasn't smart.

Look, I couldn't turn her away.

Her grandson's dying.

She's likely his only chance
to get a liver.

I hope you haven't overpromised,

because unless her labs have improved,

there's nothing we can do.



I'm still struggling
to wrap my head around it.

Was my father the man I knew,

the rigid, by-the-book sailor,

or was that all an act,
and his true self

was this secret life with Gerald?

The two aren't mutually exclusive.

Yeah, I guess that's true.

But end of the day,
it was still a lie, right?

To himself, to me,
to who knows who else?

You check in with your family
about this yet?

I, uh...

I tried to... I talked
to my sister Emily about it,

but it was clear she had
no idea, so I dropped it.

My mom... I don't even know how
to approach the conversation.

What if she already knew?

That means she went along with the lie

and kept it from me.

And if she didn't know,
then I'm just outing my father.

The whole thing is, um...

It's a lot, right?

I just think you got to
be patient with yourself.

You know, give yourself time
to figure it all out.

It's the ED.

Maybe work would be a good distraction.

Nikola Corluka.

Mr. Corluka, I'm Dr. Scott.

Stefan trusts you, so I'm trusting you.

This is Eva.

She was awake all night.

Stomach pains, nausea, vomiting...

And fever.

I checked her temperature
again a few minutes ago: . .

My wife, Lena.

Hey, Eva.

I'm sorry you're not feeling so great.

I'm going to try to help.

I need to press on your tummy,

and you let me know if it hurts, okay?

Anything?

What about now?

Ow, that hurts. Don't press anymore.

I won't. I promise.

So, Eva, what is your favorite food?

Ice cream.

Mmm, delicious.

If I brought you a big bowl
right now, would you eat it?

I don't think I could.

It hurts too much.

I get it.

I need to talk to your parents
for a minute.

An ultrasound will confirm,

but pretty sure it's her appendix.

It needs to come out.

So make a list of everything you need...

Ultrasound, other supplies...
And I'll have

Stefan bring them.

I'm not a surgeon.

And we can't do the operation here.

Eva needs the hospital.

I'm more comfortable at home.

Nikola.

It's Eva.

Listen to the doctor.

Okay, what else?

I want the best surgeon.

And you're not leaving my side.

Oh, fudge!

I'll take over. Thanks.

I'm Nurse Lockwood.
This is Dr. Asher, OBGYN.

I'm Mary, uh, Morgan.

This is my... this is my husband, Jesse.

Nice to meet you both.

So Morgan, how far along are you?

weeks?

We're supposed to have
three more, right?

Your first baby, huh?

- It's that obvious?
- Aww.

Good vitals.

Baby heart rate's .

?

Is that good?

It's excellent.

There you go.

Morgan, has your water broke yet?

Uh, no.

But... but Jesse's been timing
the contractions.

How far apart are they?

Damn. I didn't push the timer button.

- I thought that I did.
- [SCREAMS]

Pushing the button. Timer's on.

Okay Morgan, I'm going
to check you out, okay?

Okay.

All right, you're about
centimeters dilated.

What's that mean?

Baby's on its way.

Okay, Morgan, do you have a birth plan?

I think I want to do
a natural childbirth

without dr*gs.

[MOANS] This is...

Two minutes. Two minutes.

All right, guys, we're going to move
up to labor and delivery.

Go from there.

Oh, God.

We're going to be parents today.

Morgan, Jessie, I'm a midwife.

Would you like me to stay with you?

- Yes!
- Yes.

Okay. Okay.

Mr. Henderson, Dr. Archer.

- This is Dr. Choi.
- Morning.

Miles. My daughter, Anya.

Apologies for the mud bath.

We were doing an obstacle
course race, you know.

Rope climb, army crawl...

You know, father-daughter bonding.

Good, clean family fun.

Yeah, it was till I fell.

Eh, just missed a handhold

and hit the ground kind of funny.

Yeah? Can you flex up and down

- for me?
- Yeah, yeah.

As far as you can.

Did you hit your head?

Experience any dizziness,
loss of consciousness?

No. No. Just a bruised ego.

Well, I'll get an x-ray to be sure,

- but I think it's just a sprain.
- Cool.

There's another race
in a couple of weeks.

Think he'll be ready?

Well, hell yeah, I'll be ready.

Come on.

A tech will be by
with that x-ray in a minute.

- All right.
- Thank you.

Thanks.

It seems pretty straightforward.

No surgery necessary.

So I'm going to peel off.

Okay, Chief.

Then my health is better?

Yes.

Your donor screening labs, overall,

have slightly improved.

But the numbers are still
not ideal for surgery.

Is it a yes or a no?

I still want a pre-op clearance

from internal medicine in cardiology,

but as of now, yes.

You can donate a portion
of your liver to Zeke.

Oh, Zeke, it's finally happening.

- Ms. Belkin?
- Yeah?

It's important for you
to know that even though we've

approved the surgery, the operation

hasn't gotten any simpler.

[QUIET DRAMATIC MUSIC]

These situations
can be life-threatening.

Understood.

But it's not my life I'm most
concerned about right now,

so whatever consent
you need, you have it.

Okay.

Let's get you admitted.

Okay.

I love you, honey.

Love you too, Grandma.



Okay, Zeke, so this is
what's going to happen next.

I don't think I can do this.

Look, I know it's scary.

But Dr. Blake... she's
the absolute best.

You know, it'll all be over soon,

and afterwards, you're going
to feel so much better.

You don't understand.

My parents d*ed of COVID.

And I think I gave it
to them because I wasn't

old enough to be vaccinated.

Now this operation... I could
k*ll my grandmother, too.

Hey, hey, hey.

That's not going to happen.

You don't know that.

Hey.

I don't want to put
my grandma in danger...

but I don't want to die.

Hey, hey, hey.

I don't want to die. [SOBBING]

It's okay, Zeke.

It's all right.

And I'm not just tired.
I'm utterly exhausted.

But it's like all the time.

I'm also sore, stiff, the works.

And Dorian, how long
you've been feeling that way?

Off and on for a few months.

I finally dragged myself out of bed
to see what was going on.

And I hate hospitals.

But I heard Maggie Lockwood works here,

so thought I'd give Med
the benefit of the doubt.

Okay. So you know Maggie?

I haven't seen her since high school.

But, yeah.

No kidding?

Maggie's on a case upstairs,

but I can let her know you're here.

No.

No, that's... that's okay.

I don't want to bother her.

Okay, so tell me.
What was Maggie like back then?

Just a little whirlwind.

She was popular, valedictorian.

She ran every club back then.

Yep. Sounds like Maggie.

You know, she and I... we did
"Seasons of Love" in choir.

She over-sang everyone until
the teacher gave her a solo.

Yeah, that was probably
her plan all along.

You know what? You might be right.

[BOTH CHUCKLE]

Lymph nodes feel okay.

No tenderness or swelling.

CBC, BNP, TSH, blood cultures,
and a liver panel?

Sounds good.

We're going to try and get you
some straight answers today.

It was nice meeting you, Dorian.

Thank you.

Yes. Okay.

Uh-huh. Thank you.

Eva has just been put under.

The surgery will last about an hour.

[SPEAKING SERBIAN]

I'm praying for Eva,
that she'll come through this

like she did the last time.

Last time?

Eva had a medical scare
shortly after she was born.

Thankfully, the doctor
said it was nothing.

Still, I was so afraid.

Sir, can I get you
or Mrs. Corluka anything?

Food, water?

Did I ask you for anything?

No, sir.

Then leave me alone.

Yes, sir.

[TENSE MUSIC]



You worked
alongside Dr. Cooper, correct?

He'd come down to the ED to consult...

Don't tell her. Tell the jury.

Yes.

We collaborated on several cases.

And in those collaborations,
did Dr. Cooper mistreat

or misdiagnose a patient?

No.

But the VasCOM was approved for use...

Just keep it simple.

Just yes or no, but with confidence.

So you would describe
Dr. Cooper as a good physician?

No.

You just said Dr. Cooper's
patients were well cared for.

Yes. I mean, he was a good physician,

- but he committed fraud.
- No.

Now you just took the bait.

Okay, now you're on record
as saying Dr. Cooper was

a diligent, caring physician.

- You're twisting my words.
- Yes.

And so will Cooper's lawyers.

All right, I can't do this.

Look, if I say the wrong thing,
it could blow the whole case.

No. And then Cooper gets off the hook,

and this was for nothing.

I think that's enough for today.

Yeah, me too.

I need to get back to my patients.

All right, Will, I know
this is frustrating, okay?

It's just... this is a big case.

So I'm sorry, but I'm
just going to keep on

being the prick lawyer.

- Wonderful.
- Hey.

Look on the bright side.

You got an apartment building out of it.

[QUIET DRAMATIC MUSIC]



You're quiet.

Visualizing what we need to do, I hope?

Yeah.

I been thinking about Zeke.

Just terrified something's going

to happen to his grandma.
Cried on my shoulder.

- Tore my heart out.
- Okay, stop, stop.

Stop talking.

Celeste's surgery is
already difficult enough.

But for you to bring Zeke's fears

into the OR with you, that's...

That's not helpful.

Let's just concentrate
on the task at hand.



That's great. So we're out of here?

Your LDL cholesterol's a little high,

but nothing to worry about.

Just maybe cut back on the red meat.

Otherwise, yeah, you're good to go.

Oh, thank God. Because I am starving

but didn't want to go till
I knew what was going on.

Dad, do you want anything from the cafe?

Kind of already pulled up the menu.

Why don't you get me my glasses?

I guess this is what
losing a step looks like.

Can't run, can't see.

Whatever.

You know, why don't you just give me
the, um, roast beef sandwich?

What did he just say about red meat?

The turkey wrap's pretty good.

Then just what the doctor ordered.

Always... always taking care of me.

Miles, I noticed you were having

trouble seeing the menu.

You mind if I take
a quick look at your eyes?

Sure.

- [FLASHLIGHT CLICKS]
- All right.

[FOREBODING MUSIC]



Uh...

I am seeing a bit of a swelling
in the back of your right eye.

I'd like to get an MRI.

Really?

That doesn't sound good.

I just want to be thorough.

Yeah, well, I guess that's
what you want in a doctor.

So, okay.

Let's do it.

- Great. Thanks.
- Yeah.

Small world.

I've got trail mix in my lunch box too.

[CHUCKLES] Yeah.

I eat them when I'm stressed.

And really just the chocolate.

I know fruits would be
healthier, but grapes, apples?

I'm allergic.

Hmm. Me too.

So all your tests came back normal.

I'm afraid we don't have
any answers for you.

I should have known.

The headaches... they kicked in
about half an hour ago.

And whenever I get them,
bad news usually follows.

You know, there are a few more tests

that we can actually run.

Anything.

I just want to know what's going on
so I can start feeling better.

Okay. Hang tight.

Stiffness, fatigue, and now headache?

Could have been infection somewhere.

I'm thinking the same thing.
Let's get an LP and an MRI.

I'll order them up.



Hey, Eva, feeling better?

Can I have ice cream with sprinkles now?

[LAUGHTER]

How about we start with a popsicle?

The operation was as
routine as they get.

Eva may feel tired or sore
for the next few days,

but this time next week, I do expect

that she'll be back at full strength.

Hey, sweetie.

I'm proud of you for being so brave.

[MONITOR BEEPING]

Eva.

Eva?

Hey.

Eva, can you hear me?

Stat's dropping, s.

We got a pulse, but she's not breathing.

Call a code and bag her.

What's happening?

Mr. Corluka, please, step back.

I want to know what's going on.

Intubation and dr*gs.

milligrams sux,
six milligrams etomidate.

What are you doing?

I'm helping Eva breathe.

- Pushing meds.
- Oh, my God.

[MONITOR BEEPING CONTINUES]

I'm in.

You said she's doing better.

Why did she stop breathing?

I don't know.

A possible heart dysrhythmia.

I don't want theories. I want answers.

I don't have any. I need to run tests.

Nikola.

[TENSE MUSIC]



Do what you have to.

CBC, CMP, blood, gas, mag, and false.

Chest x-ray, EKG, and an echo.

Hepatic vein is not cooperating, is it?

Does not want to take the suture.

Okay, let's try this again.

The vein is so friable.

It's like tissue paper.

Don't want it to tear.

You through the vein wall?

Coming out the other side.

Got it.

Nice job.

One suture.

Long way to go.

[SCREAMING]

You're doing great, honey.

Just keep breathing.

You keep breathing.

Oh, I changed my mind. I
can't do this. I want the epidural.

I'm sorry, Morgan.

We're way far past that point.

You're too deep into labor.

Okay, a few more big pushes, Morgan.

Okay.

Oh, my God.

That's a head.

Now breathe out and push.

Slow and steady. Keep on pushing.

You got this.

Yeah, the head's out.

Head is out.

What? Head went back in.

What happened?

Okay, Maggie, turtle sign.

Get her in McRoberts,
apply suprapubic pressure.

All right, Jesse.
I need you to step back.

The nurse is going to take over for us.

What's going on? Is my baby okay?

Yes, shoulders are just stuck.

Morgan, on your next contraction,

I want you to push
exactly as you have been.

I'm going to push from above

while Dr. Asher pulls from below.

- Okay.
- Okay?

Okay.

Push.

That's it.

That's it, Morgan. You're doing great.

Keep pushing.

The baby's coming.

Yes! Got him.

[BABY CRYING]

It's a boy.

Oh, my God.

He's beautiful.

He's enormous.

So interest rates are going up again.

You landed your apartment building
just in time.

I guess I got lucky.

You still are.

Got a tenant for you.

I'm not ready for renters yet.

Units aren't even done.

Think of it this way:
one less renter to find

is one less headache.

Yeah, all right. Send me their info.

You already got it.

It's Dr. Asher.

No. Just not a good idea.

All right.

But I'll keep looking.

We can figure out
the finder's fee later.

Uh, no, Doris.

Is that Miles' MRI?

Yeah.

Ah.

I'll back you up.

Hey, Miles.

We got your results.

Where's Anya?

Had to take a work call.

- Oh, we can wait for her.
- No, no, no.

It's fine. It's fine.
I don't want to interrupt her.

It's a new job.

Okay, so your MRI
revealed optical neuritis.

It's inflammation
of your eye that causes

discomfort and vision loss.

Good news is, typically,
optical neuritis

will resolve on its own with time.

Good news implies there's...

There's bad news.

The MRI also revealed two small plaques

in your motor cortex.

Now, we'll run
some more tests to confirm,

but that finding plus neuritis,

I think it's likely we're looking

at multiple sclerosis.

Wow.

MS?

For real?

I'm afraid so.

That's muscular, right?

I'm going to lose more than just a step.

I'm going to keep getting
weaker and weaker.

When Anya comes back, we can discuss

next steps to help you...

No.

Do not tell my daughter.

[DRAMATIC MUSIC]

We won't.

Right, Dr. Choi?



Zeke?


He's doing wonderfully.

As soon as you're feeling up
to it, you can go visit him.

He asked me to give you a message.

You rock, Grandma.

[MONITOR BEEPING]

Celeste?

BPs dropping, over .

Celeste?

Heart rate's on the rise. .

Damn it.

She's bleeding.

Bolus a liter and then two of
blood, two of plasma. Let's go.

It's got to be the hepatic vein.

Didn't hold the sutures.

We've got to open her back up.

Clearly, they're not
discussing Miles' diagnosis.

Maybe he's, you know, still processing

or trying to find the right words.

You know, didn't want to scare her.

Or he's just not ever going to tell her.

The longer you hold on secrets,
the harder they are to admit.

My father took all of his to the grave.

I completely appreciate
where you're coming from.

But I mean, how he wants
to go about it...

Kind of up to him, right?

But it's a betrayal.

By keeping quiet, he's doing to Anya

what my father did to me.

Normal, every single test.

Yes.

I also did a CT head,
MRI and additional blood labs

for endocrine disorders.

And they were all normal too.

I don't understand. Is this good or bad?

- Right now, I don't know.
- You don't know.

You don't know.
I'm so tired of that answer.

Dr. Scott, she's
over-breathing the vent.

RSBI is .

What does that mean?

Eva's breathing well on her own again.

Eva, can you hear me?

Okay. Set up the extubate.

So she doesn't need the machine anymore?

No. It doesn't appear so.

And you don't know why
this happened either, do you?

I don't.

I'll re-review her labs, her history.

That's backwards.

[SPEAKING SERBIAN]

Mrs. Corluka, you said
a doctor treated Eva

shortly after she was born.

But I don't see it
listed in the records.

We didn't go to the hospital.

The doctor came to our home.

One night, her SIDS monitor went off.

I went into her room, picked her up,

but she was fine.

The doctor did an exam,
but found nothing.

It never happened again.

SIDS monitor.

You know, I'd like to run one more test:

an exome sequencing analysis.

What is that?

It's a genetic test
that targets proteins.

I think it might provide us
with some answers.

But it is expensive
and can sometimes cause issues

with insurance companies.

So we need to contact...

Run the test.

Dr. Choi.

Have a minute?

Of course.

I know my dad.

And whenever he's keeping
something from me, he says,

"Everything's fine."

He's saying that about his MRI.

It makes me worried that it's not.

I'm sorry, Anya,
but I can't disclose anything.

HIPAA rules.

I guess I just have to trust

that he's telling me the truth.

Anya, you know,
with your dad's vision trouble,

he might need you
to help with the fine print.

You know what the CARES Act is?

No.

It requires hospitals to give access

to patient medical records.

This is linked to their portal.

Maybe you can help your dad
put in his personal information

to access his chart.

Medications, test results, everything.

Oh.

Okay. Thanks.

Sure.

Need more suction.

What you expected?

Hepatic vein not able
to support the sutures?

It's not the problem.

Ah, there we go.

Bleeding is coming from
the raw edge of the liver.

Let it go. I got it.

The clip I placed came off.

It faulty?

No. Doesn't seem to be.

Not sure why it didn't hold.

Well, it's an easy fix.

Swap it out.

Dr. Blake?

Hemostat and clip applier.

[TENSE MUSIC]



You all right?

My positioning's just off.

Okay, what do you need?

Dr. Marcel, I think you're at a
better angle to apply the clip.

Are you sure?

Yes. Take over.

Okay.

Congenital what?

Central hypoventilation syndrome, CCHS,

is a non-inherited gene
mutation that affects

the autonomic nervous system.

In Eva's case, her brain forgot
to tell her body how deeply

or how often to breathe.

Then Eva had this forever?

Why didn't we know?

Well, she had been getting by.

But today, with the appendectomy,

she needed extra oxygen
to come out of anesthesia.

She couldn't do it.

Is there a cure?

Unfortunately, no.

But there are treatments.

Eva's case is mild.

I suspect that she'll be most vulnerable

to breathing lapses during sleeping.

I recommend a ventilation machine

like a CPAP to monitor oxygen intake.

Stefan.

Da, da, on it, Boss.

Thank you, Dr. Scott.

I raised my voice earlier, but I'm...

I get it.

It's your daughter.

[DRAMATIC MUSIC]

Excuse me.



Well, looks like he told her the news.

That should make you feel better, huh?

Hey, Dean.

Yeah?

Decided I don't want
the chief position any longer.

You keep it.

Really?

Why the change of heart?

I guess, uh, just not
who I am any longer.

Huh.

All right, well, you know me.

I'm not one to argue,
so, uh... [CHUCKLES] Deal.

Good.

I'll tell Ms. Goodwin, make it official.



Hey, Morgan.

How are you doing?

Sore, bottom and top.

He hasn't stopped feeding
since he came out.

We think he's going
to be a sumo wrestler.

Well, he's off to a very good start.

His birth weight is
a new hospital delivery record.

pounds, ounces.

Seriously?

My last Leopold predicted seven pounds.

- That was way off.
- Yeah.

Estimating birth weight is
still an imperfect science.

Apparently so are due dates.

Almost three weeks we thought we had.

We put them aside to finish
the nursery, buy clothes,

pick a name.

We thought we were so prepared.

Guess not.

Pretty safe bet that just when you think

that you've got it figured it out,

this little guy is going
to throw you a curveball.

My advice is just to roll with it.

I have placed thousands
of clips, Crockett.

What happened today...

It worked out, and Celeste is fine.

Thankfully.

But it could have just
as easily gone the other way.

I should have felt
that clip hadn't engaged.

Look, I...

I backed you into a corner
when I agreed to new labs

for Celeste.

I threw you off your game.

It's my OR, my responsibility.

Not everything's about you, Crockett.

Dylan.

- Oh, Milena.
- Hey.

I'm sorry about today, okay?

It wasn't my idea to drag you in.

Stefan pitched you to Nikola...

Eva's better. It's all that matters.

I can't wait for this case to be over.

Yeah, me too.



Hey, Celeste.

Just checking in.

What's going on? Are you in pain?

No. No.

I'm happy.

Thank you for taking a chance
on me, for not giving up.

You're very welcome.

I'll let you rest.

Okay.

Oh, when you see Dr. Blake,
would you pass on my thanks

to her also?

She hasn't been by?

No. Not yet.

Okay.

Yeah, I'll see if I can track her down.

Thank you.

You got it.

Hey, Miles.

Here's your discharge papers.

I asked you not to share my diagnosis.

You said you wouldn't.

Miles, I'm sorry, but your daughter

knew something was going on.

Seriously?

You're going to argue with me?

Protecting Anya is my job, not yours.

I understand.

You know, Anya's new job is in Seattle.

I didn't tell her about the MS
because I knew

she'd give it up to stay here
to take care of me.

And she has.

I didn't realize, man.

No, you didn't.

Just go.

[DRAMATIC MUSIC]



That looked uncomfortable.
What'd you do?

Something maybe I shouldn't have.

A new you, huh?

Good call giving up the chief position.



Hasty getaway, huh?

It's never a good sign.

Yeah, it's been a long day.

I just want to go home.

Pamela, what's going on?

I know I hurt you after surgery.

Just a bit vague on how.

It's not you, it's me.

Oh. Well, thank you.
That clears up everything.

Come on, Pamela, talk to me.

If I... if I've done
something, just tell me.

I told you, it's not you, it's me.

It's literally me.

The clip didn't hold
because I didn't engage it

tightly enough.

I couldn't engage it.

What do you mean couldn't?

My hand at rest.

Rock steady.

But when I pinch my fingers together...

There's something wrong
with my hand, Crockett.

There's something really wrong.

Hey. Hey. It's okay.

Thank you.

Oh, hey, I was hoping
I'd catch up with you.

When you get your schedule tomorrow,

let's find time
for another practice session.

Okay.

Listen, um, I realize

that I haven't fully expressed

my gratitude for all that you've done.

You're still bearing the brunt
of the consequences,

and I'm the one
that got you into this mess.

So thank you.

Appreciate that.

I also appreciate you
not congratulating me

on my apartment building.

What?

Well, that's been
the takeaway for most people.

Huh.

Don't listen to them.

You're a good man, Will Halstead.

You stepped up. But then, you always do.

- Looking for an apartment?
- Yep.

A few decent ones. We'll see.

You know, my units
aren't totally done yet.

Oh.

Actually, one is livable.

Just needs a coat of paint.

But if you want it, it's yours.

I don't know. That's...

What?

Are you sure?

Yeah.

Yeah, I'm sure.

Well, then okay.

Yeah.

Thank you.

Yeah, we'll sort the lease out tomorrow.

And I'll get you the keys then.

You should know,
I'll be across the hall.

So...

So... neighbors?

Neighbors.

Thank you.

Hey, I think you know
my patient in four.

I do?

You went to high school with him.

Dorian Harwell.

Oh, my God. Dorian Harwell.

I haven't seen him in years.

Is he all right?

He had a grade glioma.

Waiting on a neurosurgeon consult,

but his prognosis is good.

- Is he okay to see visitors?
- Uh-huh.

- Okay.
- Maggie.

- Yeah?
- Um...

Is he my father?

Oh, sweetie, no.

Okay.

But if he isn't, then who is?

You've never asked me that before.

I know.

But just meeting Dorian,
it just made me think.

I'm sorry, Vanessa.

But I can't tell you.

Your biological father and I agreed

that we would never contact you.

I broke that agreement,

but I can't make that choice for him.

But maybe you could
just reach out and ask him

if he'd like to meet me.

Vanessa.

We didn't stay in touch.
I don't even know where he is.

Okay.

[MELANCHOLY MUSIC]



But I can ask around
and try to find him.

I... I'd love that.

Thank you, Maggie.

Yeah.



I guess I really upended
Miles' and Anya's lives.

Look, at least Anya got to hear

Miles' reasons for withholding
the truth from her.

I wouldn't be at all surprised
if he actually convinced her

to take that job.

Seriously.

But look, whatever happens,
at least now,

they need to figure out
what happens next together.

And that's a good thing.

Yeah.

Let's hope.

I never got to have a conversation

like that with my father.

Let's say you did.

What do you think
his reasons might have been

for withholding

his relationship with Gerald from you?

Maybe the same as what

Miles wanted for his daughter.

To protect me.

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