The.Good.Doctor.S01E05
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00:00Previously on The Good Doctor
00:02How hard can it be to just act like a normal human being?
00:06No!
00:07Stop petting that stupid rabbit!
00:09We're never going home again.
00:11We have each other and that's all we need.
00:13My brother went to heaven in front of my eyes.
00:18Never forget, you're the smart one.
00:20And I'm proud of you, Sean.
00:22I can throw in the hanger as well, but I'm gonna get you ordering.
00:25I only have 560...
00:27Dad!
00:29Hey, Penny, I missed you too.
00:38No, Penny, come.
00:40Stay.
00:42Hey, Dad.
00:44Sorry it's so early I just landed.
00:46Actually, you're a bit late.
00:48Five weeks.
00:50I know, I know.
00:52I'm sorry, it's a long story, okay?
00:56But how was it?
00:58It was your mother's funeral.
01:04Damn it.
01:15Okay.
01:16Well, um, yeah, my cell number.
01:19It only works if you answer it.
01:29Dad?
01:30Dad!
01:33Dad!
01:34Hey, hey, hey, you okay?
01:35You okay?
01:36You can't breathe?
01:37No, no, okay.
01:38I'm gonna call for help.
01:41Yeah, 911, my dad collapsed.
01:42He can't breathe.
01:43Please hurry.
01:44Just hold on, Dad.
01:45Good morning, everyone.
01:54Right on time.
01:55Would you sleep here or use a teleportation device?
01:58I used a teleportation device.
02:01Nonsensical questions usually imply sarcasm, which I found people often answer sarcastically.
02:08Good one.
02:09Trauma wants a consult on a 66-year-old male who collapsed from severe anaphylaxis, complicated by respiratory arrest.
02:16Now, his son just got back from Thailand.
02:18Almost immediately, the father had his allergic reactions.
02:22The patient has a few allergies.
02:24Pollen, mold, shellfish, but no corresponding allergens were in evidence.
02:27Well, why are we doing a surgical consult on an allergy?
02:30No, we're not.
02:31We're doing a consult on the excruciating abdominal pain he now has.
02:37As you may have heard.
02:38Mr. Wilf.
02:40Hi, I'm Dr. Neil Melendez.
02:42Heard you have some abdominal pain.
03:08I was in some serious pain.
03:2110 milligrams of morphine worth.
03:23Test results show elevated lipase, amylase, pancreatic enzymes.
03:27Pancreas is enlarged.
03:28Could be pancreatitis, maybe alcohol induced.
03:30Sun said he smelled alcohol on his father at 6 in the morning.
03:33And anaphylaxis has been known to precipitate attacks of pancreatitis.
03:37Guess that's it then.
03:40Meaning you totally disagree.
03:42Not everyone who starts their day off with a mimosa fries their pancreas.
03:46Your eyesight must be a whole lot better than mine because I can't see the entire pancreas due to the overlying bowel gas.
03:54We'll order an abdominal CT and take a better look.
03:57There you go.
03:58Where the hell is Murphy?
04:00It's a severe fracture, but I don't think you'll need pins.
04:03Young bones tend to heal very well.
04:05Young bones.
04:06Isn't that a Star Trek origins graphic novel?
04:11I'm not sure.
04:14No, that was a joke.
04:15Where are your parents?
04:16They're coming.
04:17They both work in the city, so it's a long drive for them.
04:20I was on a school field trip and I tripped over my own feet.
04:23Of course, it was right in front of Shelby Lomer.
04:26At least it was pretty gross, so I got some sympathy points for that.
04:33I would expect this to have been caused by a more serious accident.
04:36Nope.
04:37Just a trip.
04:38I do that a lot.
04:39What can I say?
04:40I'm clumsy.
04:41Yes.
04:42Now follow my finger.
04:50You have some nystagmus, an involuntary eye movement.
04:53So, what's that mean?
04:55When you fell, did you hit your head?
04:57No.
04:58What, you think I have brain damage?
05:00Nystagmus can be a sign of a neurological issue.
05:02Oh.
05:03Well, that would explain the C I got in social studies.
05:07That was another joke, wasn't it?
05:12I'm going to order a head CT for you.
05:14Go for it.
05:19Sean, are you getting any sleep?
05:20Yes.
05:21Really?
05:22I mean really getting sleep?
05:23I got here on time.
05:24Well, that's good.
05:25I used a teleportation device.
05:33Meteology form, please.
05:40Sean, that boy, he looks like...
05:42Steve.
05:43He does.
05:44Is he related?
05:46His name is Evan Gallico, so I don't think so.
05:51Wow.
05:52That is uncanny.
05:53Just coincidental.
05:54He looks exactly like your brother.
05:56No, he doesn't.
05:57His hair is shorter.
05:59It freaks me out.
06:00It doesn't freak you out.
06:01No.
06:02It's okay if it does.
06:03No, he's not, Steve.
06:04Steve's dead.
06:10I used a teleportation device.
06:11It was a joke.
06:15Yeah, that's good.
06:16That's good.
06:26So I couldn't come to Mom's funeral because I fell in love.
06:32She was another teacher at the school, a Thai woman.
06:36And she was kind and beautiful and loving.
06:42And very, very sick.
06:45She had a congenital heart defect.
06:47Look, if you don't want to tell me where you've been for the last six months, then don't.
06:58It's your business.
06:59But don't insult my intelligence.
07:01I couldn't just leave her.
07:02You couldn't leave her for five minutes to make a phone call.
07:07Is this a bad time?
07:09No.
07:11Come in.
07:17According to the CT, you have a lesion on your pancreas.
07:19What do you think this lesion could be?
07:21I'm not sure.
07:22That's why we need to biopsy it.
07:24It could just be a benign cyst.
07:26Or?
07:27Or.
07:29It could be cancer, right?
07:32We're not seeing enough.
07:50This won't take long.
07:52I know.
07:53I've had two of these.
07:54One more and I get my scalp badge.
08:00That was funny.
08:02Tough to tell without looking at you, but I'm guessing that was sarcasm.
08:06No.
08:07I have autism, which makes it hard for me to read social cues.
08:11Jokes are difficult.
08:12I used to know a kid with autism.
08:14Peter.
08:15He was kind of weird, but super nice.
08:19Used to know?
08:20And you don't know him anymore?
08:22He died.
08:24Hit by a car.
08:26You know anyone who died?
08:29My brother.
08:30That sucks.
08:35Why did you have the other CT scans?
08:37My parents have...
08:39What's the word for fear of getting sick?
08:41Hypochondriasis?
08:43No.
08:44Worse than that.
08:45They have...
08:47Nosophobia.
08:48I love that word.
08:50What do you think of Miss Gannett?
08:53She's nice.
08:54I think she's Calipygian.
08:57She's what?
08:59Calipygian?
09:00It means having shapely buttocks, Sean.
09:03The...
09:06You read the dictionary.
09:08Relax and plot it makes up for in vocab.
09:11So...
09:12You married?
09:14Girlfriend?
09:16Boyfriend?
09:18Tropical fish?
09:21I like Leah.
09:23Oh.
09:24And who's Leah?
09:25Leah is a friend.
09:26A friend you date?
09:28A friend with benefits.
09:30I lend her batteries sometimes.
09:32I like where this is going.
09:33I like where this is going.
09:38So, you know.
09:40Keep going.
09:41Because if you don't, I will.
09:43It's kind of my thing, you know?
09:45Just constant talking.
09:46And always everyone.
09:47Murphy.
09:49Well, I guess not everyone.
09:50Hey.
09:51My family's pretty easily known.
09:53My friends are pretty talkative as well, so...
09:56Are you giving the fractured arm a head CT?
09:57Yes.
09:58Get back to the pancreas.
09:59He's not clumsy.
10:00He has a brain tumor behind the inner ear.
10:05Forget the pancreas.
10:06Mr. and Mrs. Gallico.
10:07Hi.
10:08Hi.
10:09Dr. Sean Murphy.
10:10I'm treating your son.
10:11Well, how is he?
10:12We were told it was a bad break, but it should heal no problem.
10:14I know why Evan tripped.
10:15He has a tumor in the temporal bone behind his left ear, which is affecting his balance.
10:20I've arranged for consult with Dr. Najee in oncology and she's going...
10:21She won't be necessary.
10:23We...
10:25We already have an oncology.
10:26Evan's been diagnosed with stage four osteosarcoma.
10:27He's complaining of a sore shin.
10:28And the last thing that we expected was bone cancer.
10:31The doctors at SFM, they gave him a year to live.
10:36That was seven months ago.
10:37I'm sorry.
10:38I'm sorry.
10:39I'm sorry.
10:40I'm sorry.
10:41I'm sorry.
10:42I'm sorry.
10:43I'm sorry.
10:44I'm sorry.
10:45I'm sorry.
10:46I'm sorry.
10:47I'm sorry.
10:48I'm sorry.
10:49I'm sorry.
10:50I'm sorry.
10:51I'm sorry.
10:52I'm sorry.
10:53I'm sorry.
10:54I'm sorry.
10:55That was seven months ago.
10:57Osteosarcoma explains the severity of his fracture.
11:01You will need pins in his arm after all.
11:03Can we see him?
11:05Yes.
11:06He's in room 414.
11:07Dr. Murphy.
11:11He doesn't know about his diagnosis.
11:14We would really like to keep it that way.
11:24He's the patient.
11:29Doesn't he have the right to know the truth?
11:32Well, no.
11:33He's also a minor, so no he doesn't.
11:35Evan's very intelligent.
11:36He'd be able to handle it.
11:37Well, Sean, maybe it's not just about Evan.
11:40Maybe it's about his parents as well.
11:43Maybe it's just too difficult for them to tell Evan right now.
11:47I don't know.
11:48Then they're the ones who shouldn't be told.
11:49Let me ask you this, Sean.
11:51What's so wrong about Evan being allowed to enjoy as much of his life as possible?
11:56Evan wants to know the truth.
11:58How do you know that?
12:03If this were Steve, if this were your brother, would he want to know the truth?
12:08Is that what this is?
12:10I don't know.
12:15Dad's such a tool.
12:16I found my birthday present in their closet right where they always hide it.
12:20I was just about to open it when Dad caught me snooping and freaked out.
12:23I hate all that phony surprise stuff.
12:26It's an alcohol-based water cannon.
12:29I was with Mom when she bought it.
12:31Thank you, Sean.
12:33Your honesty is refreshing!
12:35Yes, he would want to know the truth.
12:40Well, there's nothing we can do about it.
12:44It's not your decision.
12:45It's theirs.
12:46He's their son.
12:47Claire, I need you.
13:05Sure, what's up?
13:08I need someone to lie for me.
13:11Okay.
13:12Are you flattered?
13:20Hey, Doc.
13:23There's something I need to tell my dad.
13:25We haven't moved him.
13:27He's still in room, uh, 326.
13:31Do you have a medical question for me?
13:35Is he dying?
13:36We don't know yet.
13:37The biopsy will tell us more.
13:39Okay.
13:42My dad is a good guy.
13:47We've just never been on the same page, you know?
13:52My mother was the one that I could talk to.
13:56Same for him.
13:58So, without her, we're both pretty useless.
14:05Room of 326.
14:14Right.
14:23Dr. Murphy called me in for a second opinion.
14:25Um, you need some pins in your arm.
14:28Why?
14:29What's changed?
14:30Well, after studying the radiology report, given how bad the break is, we just think it would
14:36be a prudent step to ensure an efficient and thorough amending to the break.
14:40Will I be able to play baseball again?
14:42Well, I don't see why not.
14:43Once it's completely healed.
14:44After some physiotherapy.
14:45How many more are you going to be able to report to me?
14:46He wanted someone to lie for him.
14:47And he picked you.
14:48And he picked you.
14:49And they will sign us for personal advice.
14:53And he picked you.
14:54I know, right?
14:55He's lying to his dad about something.
15:09Yeah, what?
15:10I don't know.
15:11You didn't ask?
15:12I didn't seem bad of it.
15:13Medically.
15:14You know, it's not that difficult to be a human being.
15:16Just tell him to come clean.
15:17Honesty is the best policy.
15:18A lie is a stone in your heart.
15:19Who said the last one?
15:20Me?
15:21I made it up.
15:22Oh.
15:23Mm-hmm.
15:24And I got it.
15:42He's anathalactic.
15:43Will you get me an epi?
15:44His throat's constricting.
15:45Hold the tube.
15:47So, what's up with Dr. Brown?
16:03She's Leah, isn't she?
16:07Claire is my colleague.
16:08Oh, come on. I saw the way you were looking at her.
16:12How?
16:13I don't think I looked like that.
16:18Okay, so then why'd you call her in for a consult?
16:23Okay.
16:25Yes, she's better at talking to people than I am.
16:29Wow, I counted like 50 tells there.
16:32You really suck at lying.
16:34I know.
16:35Too bad. It's an important social skill.
16:39So, how do you know when to lie?
16:41Why?
16:42When people need to know things, they need to know.
16:45If they don't, lie through your teeth and feel good about it.
16:48What if they need to know the truth, but it'll hurt them?
16:54Some can handle it. Some can't.
16:58So, how do you know who can and who can't?
17:00You tell the truth.
17:01If they like you after, then you'll know.
17:04If they don't, then it doesn't really matter anyway.
17:07You have cancer.
17:19Yeah.
17:21I know.
17:21My parents took me in for a sore leg.
17:33After a whole bunch of tests, they talked to the doctor and came out, told me I was fine.
17:38That's it.
17:39Just fine.
17:40The next day, they bought me a PS4.
17:45So, I googled my symptoms and I narrowed it down to osteosarcoma or growing pains.
17:51Kids don't get gaming systems for growing pains.
17:54Kids don't get gaming systems for growing pains.
17:56Hey.
17:58It's okay.
18:02I'm not afraid to die.
18:04You're not?
18:05Well, I mean, the dying part will suck if it hurts, but...
18:10I'm not afraid about the actual death part.
18:13Because you believe you're going to heaven?
18:16Because I don't.
18:17If I believe in heaven, then I got to believe in God.
18:23Then I got to believe God made me sick.
18:26How messed up is that?
18:28It's just easier to think that it's all random.
18:32And when it's over, it's just...
18:37Over.
18:39Over.
18:39So, what about Leah?
18:46Where did you guys meet?
18:48In the hallway.
18:54That's a beautiful story.
18:56Yes.
18:57She's my neighbor.
18:59Convenient.
19:01He had another allergic reaction.
19:03Ancreas?
19:04Meryl Wilkes, yeah.
19:05And the second attack was even more severe than the first.
19:08It coincided with biopsy in the pancreatic lesion, which now appears as a cyst.
19:11Well, now I know he's allergic to whatever's in that cyst.
19:14We also know that the next cyst that pops will probably kill him.
19:16Well, if there is a next, let's run a couple tests.
19:19See if there's any evidence of parasites and MRI his entire body.
19:21If we're lucky, he only had two cysts and he can go home.
19:26Hmm.
19:28Are you looking for loopholes?
19:30Hoping to save Evan?
19:31Everyone makes mistakes.
19:33This means you should double-check every file in the hospital.
19:36The oncologist flagged his neutrophil count of 634 is low.
19:41That is low.
19:42Low normal.
19:43I can still hear the word low in there.
19:50He's just a kid.
19:52I know how hard it is to think of him dying.
19:54He's okay with that.
19:58I find that hard to believe.
19:59We all die.
20:01If we accepted that, we'd be happier.
20:03Maybe, but we're not good with contentment.
20:08Fighting death is what keeps us alive.
20:09We got a hit.
20:21Echinococcus.
20:22Echinococcus?
20:23A cyst filled with tapeworms?
20:24Cysts.
20:25Are there more?
20:26Three more?
20:27Four more.
20:28You missed one in this brain.
20:29Dr. Glassman?
20:34Yeah.
20:35You used to be a neurosurgeon, right?
20:37So they say.
20:38Take this, will you?
20:41I need one.
20:43Who'd you recommend?
20:44What you got?
20:45Wow, that's cool.
20:56How the hell did I get tapeworms in my head?
20:58No idea, but you do.
21:00You can pick up the eggs from coyotes or wolves.
21:02Have you been hanging around coyotes or wolves?
21:04I live in the suburbs.
21:06We don't even have a petting zoo.
21:07You might have had these cysts for quite some time.
21:09When one of them burst,
21:11that's what caused the first allergic reaction.
21:13Oh, why did it burst?
21:15Why did it burst?
21:16Any sort of movements?
21:18Twist, turn, squeeze.
21:20A hug?
21:21Could be.
21:24But you weren't there for the second one.
21:28I punctured the cyst on your pancreas during the biopsy.
21:32As you've seen,
21:33allergic reactions get worse each time they happen.
21:36So a third one, that would be bad.
21:37That would be...
21:38That would be very bad.
21:40So we're going to have to surgically remove all the cysts intact.
21:43Dr. Glassman's one of the most highly acclaimed neurosurgeons in the state.
21:47You are very lucky to have him.
21:49And Dr. Kalu is fast becoming a very accomplished flatterer.
21:53The cranial cyst, that is a big deal.
21:56We're going to have to take off the top of your skull.
21:58You'll be digging into my brain?
22:00Well, yeah, pretty much.
22:02With saline.
22:03We use it to gently displace the cyst,
22:05and then, poof, it magically pops out.
22:07Kind of like delivering a baby.
22:08You know, childbirth.
22:09We're painless.
22:11And then we move on to the other cysts.
22:14Hey, we're going to take good care of you.
22:16We're going to take good care of you.
22:46We're going to take good care of you.
23:16Evan doesn't have cancer.
23:39It might not be cancer.
23:40It might not be cancer.
23:43Look at you on time, two for two.
23:48It might not be cancer.
23:49Fractured arm?
23:50Yes.
23:51You said he'd been diagnosed with stage four osteosarcoma.
23:54Evan was diagnosed with the flu eight months ago,
23:57but his symptoms were actually a better fit with Epstein-Barr virus,
24:00which is linked to Langerhans cell histiocytosis,
24:02which causes osteolytic lesions in the long bones of the upper limbs.
24:05And those lesions could be misdiagnosed as signs of osteosarcoma.
24:08Yes.
24:08What about his brain tumor?
24:09Langerhans can also manifest in the skull.
24:13Instead of a death sentence,
24:14he could have something that could easily be treated with prednisone?
24:17Next, we need to do a bone marrow aspiration to confirm.
24:20I assume you've looked at his file.
24:21For a very long time.
24:22Well, it must have been a biopsy.
24:24What did the pathology report say?
24:25Yes, there were two biopsies.
24:26Both were positive for osteosarcoma.
24:30Murphy.
24:31They could be false positives.
24:33Do you have any idea how unlikely it is to have two false positives?
24:360.3%.
24:36Which we can comfortably round off to not likely.
24:38It is possible.
24:40Yes, but it means telling the parents of a dying child that there's hope,
24:43when really there isn't.
24:45Grab a shower and get ready for rounds.
24:53Wow.
24:53Imaginative and creative.
24:56Yes.
24:57What are the chances you're right?
24:580.3%.
24:59330 to 1.
25:01333 to 1.
25:03You really think that it's worth putting Evan's parents through all this?
25:07Of course.
25:08If we did this 333 times,
25:10we'd be giving false hope to 332 people for approximately four hours,
25:14and we'd save one life.
25:15Isn't that worth it?
25:17Anyway, Dr. Melendez won't let me ask for consent to test.
25:21What if I don't tell them what I'm doing?
25:23A blatant ethics violation?
25:25That's your solution?
25:26Yes.
25:27How do I do that?
25:33Well, uh,
25:34you do it,
25:36and then you don't tell anyone.
25:38No one.
25:39If anyone asks,
25:40you're attending,
25:40notice the low RPC count,
25:42and needed to find the cause.
25:43That's it.
25:44No biggie.
25:45Hmm.
25:47You know Wilkes Grocery,
25:59Senator Clara 17th?
26:01It's been an institution for nearly 60 years.
26:04My grandparents started it in 1958,
26:07and my wife and I took it over in 82.
26:09But when my wife got sick,
26:11and I started talking to Kevin about taking it over,
26:13he just took off.
26:18To him,
26:19it was just a place to sell lettuce and toilet paper.
26:24My father chairs a real estate development company in the UK.
26:29Thought I'd be the perfect person to set up the U.S. office.
26:32You wanted to be in the helping profession, hmm?
26:35I wanted to be in my profession.
26:37It's not about how small or how big the venture is.
26:40It's about doing something that's yours.
26:45I guess.
26:53When he was little,
26:54we were inseparable.
26:58Oh, he used to love to come to the store.
27:02To work.
27:06I even had a little apron made for him.
27:08It had his name on it, too.
27:10So, you know, kids,
27:13grow up,
27:16I'm just grateful that he stayed close to his mother.
27:20He could talk to her,
27:21tell her anything.
27:24So could I.
27:27And when she went,
27:29I lost them both.
27:38Looks like he's back now.
27:40All I know is he ditched me when I needed him.
27:46Well, you know,
27:46as a wise person once said,
27:49holding a grudge is a stone in your heart.
27:51What's that for?
28:00Local anesthetic for a bone marrow aspiration.
28:03Why do I need a bone marrow aspiration?
28:07My attending saw a low RBC count
28:09and wants to find the cause.
28:12No biggie.
28:13No biggie?
28:15You're lying.
28:16What's going on?
28:18You already told me I have terminal cancer.
28:21What's worse than that?
28:27You might not.
28:31Might not be osteosarcoma,
28:33might be Langerhans cell histiocytosis,
28:35which is treatable.
28:37Treatable?
28:38As in I might not die?
28:41That's why I need to aspirate,
28:42to find out for sure.
28:43Do my parents know?
28:45I was told not to get their hopes up.
28:49Then let's do it before they get back.
28:53We're all on to your side.
29:05Is there a scout badge for aspirations?
29:08I think someone just made a joke.
29:14Hello.
29:15What are you doing?
29:16Painkiller.
29:17My arm hurts.
29:19That wouldn't explain
29:20why I'd be injecting your lumbar region.
29:27Okay.
29:28Yes, hello.
29:29I think Evan may have been misdiagnosed with cancer.
29:33I think he has something
29:35that creates bone lesions
29:36that look like osteosarcoma.
29:38It's a small chance, 0.3%.
29:40You told Evan that he has cancer?
29:43And now you are telling him and us
29:45that he doesn't.
29:46I'm telling you he might not.
29:47That's why I need to perform this aspiration.
29:49He says whatever I have might be treatable.
29:52Are you insane?
29:52No, I'm not insane.
29:54I thought you'd be happy.
29:55There is a significant link
29:56between Langerhans cell histiocytosis.
29:58Let's go.
29:58Get out.
30:02Let me get you some water.
30:08Oh, my God.
30:09That's right here.
30:10All right, buddy.
30:11We're right here.
30:12Respiratory staff!
30:13You have the massive embolist,
30:21probably thrown from his fracture.
30:23It's located at the bifurcation
30:25of the pulmonary arteries.
30:26He's close to hemodynamic collapse.
30:28No kidding.
30:29I'd like to assist.
30:31Not a chance.
30:32Okay.
30:33I'd like to assist.
30:35You're obviously too close to the case.
30:37I think I'm just the right amount of close.
30:39Murphy, you lied to the parents
30:40just so you could try to prove
30:41your ridiculous theory.
30:42You're too damn close.
30:46Saddle embolism.
30:47Scrub in.
30:55We have to get rid of the embolist
30:56before he arrests.
30:57His heart is barely pumping blood.
30:59I feel the pulmonary artery.
31:00I just need to find the obstruction.
31:02There.
31:03I got it.
31:04Knife?
31:04Knife.
31:05EKG is showing right heart strain.
31:07He can't take this much longer.
31:08I know.
31:08But if I move any quicker,
31:09I could nick the left main artery
31:11and kill the boy.
31:17The phrase no biggie gave me away.
31:19You really got to learn how to lie, Sean.
31:23Am I in trouble?
31:25Yes.
31:28Unless you're right.
31:28If I'm wrong,
31:31they shouldn't be upset.
31:32They know it's highly unlikely.
31:36False hope, Sean.
31:38It's just plain cruel.
31:39Hey.
31:48Thanks for your help.
31:49Great.
31:56Hey.
31:59Did he talk to you?
32:02Did you talk to him?
32:03I don't know what to tell him.
32:05Do you love your father, don't you?
32:12Yeah, of course.
32:14Right.
32:14Well, he's about to go into perennia surgery.
32:16There's huge risks involved.
32:18Whatever this lie is,
32:19can you live the rest of your life
32:20knowing you kept it from him?
32:21My girlfriend wasn't sick.
32:38Okay, she dumped me.
32:40She's married with two kids,
32:42had no intention of leaving them.
32:43I was an idiot.
32:45You got your heart broken.
32:47That's the problem here.
32:48No, no, Dad.
32:49The problem is
32:50I didn't run away to Thailand
32:53because I thought
32:54Wilk's grocery was beneath me.
32:58I was afraid
32:59that I would never be able
33:01to fill your shoes.
33:04And then I proved myself right.
33:06Left pulmonary artery is open.
33:25Ring forceps.
33:28Ring forceps.
33:32Come on.
33:36Got it.
33:41EKG is normalizing.
33:43He's okay.
33:44Nice job.
33:45All right.
33:46Flush left pulmonary artery.
33:47Close him up.
33:55Um, Dr. Melendez?
33:59Take a look at this.
34:06Recycling, Sean.
34:30Very responsible.
34:32It's a book.
34:33I appreciate that.
34:44Thanks, Sean.
34:53Hey.
34:59We got the embolism.
35:00Mm-hmm.
35:01He's in recovery
35:03and he's doing fine.
35:05But while we were in there,
35:07we did find something else.
35:09Lesions on his ribs.
35:14You're a funible proof
35:15of osteosarcoma.
35:17It's metastasized
35:18to his chest cavity.
35:22I'm sorry.
35:23I'm sorry.
35:23I'm sorry.
35:30I'm sorry.
35:44I'm sorry.
35:50give that a nice warm saline bath forceps and taylor scissors please forceps and scissors
36:03thank you
36:03look at that that's what the pyramids painted the mona lisa
36:18we've entered the internet
36:21there is our interloper squeeze ball please deidra squeeze ball his name for it not ours
36:31saline gently displaces the cyst coax it out of his little hiding place hopefully in one piece
36:39so we don't have to call 9-1-1 come on now trey please
36:47there we go and and you got it got it he has his father's eyes
36:58that was incredible one down three to go
37:02hey there he is
37:17what's the matter nothing we're just happy you did so great
37:26you had what's called an embolism it clogged an artery in your lungs but the good news is they
37:34got it and you're gonna be just fine still too bad about the cancer huh no no no doctor did not know
37:44what he was talking about dad i know all about it i have for a long time
37:49i am so sorry
37:58it's okay
37:59because i'm not gonna be alone
38:16grandma's gonna be there too
38:19auntie arlene
38:22uncle jim if he figured out how to start swearing
38:28i'll get you some water buddy
38:36so i took penny for a walk just run block
38:50and i picked her up some of those raw hide treats
38:56you know
38:57no one's a mom you still like to give to her
39:03i miss her dad
39:09i miss her dad
39:11and i missed my 1997
39:12i missed my first son
39:16if she got back on those films
39:20she didn't have to laugh
39:20so she drove me
39:22her dad
39:25so me
39:27and i asked her
39:28and i was thinking
39:30she got me
39:31because that's a great interest
39:33so i went and made her
39:35but i tried to share
39:36The coast is clear?
39:46Yes.
39:49I was wrong.
39:51You tried.
39:52I was wrong.
39:55Your parents hate me.
39:57I know.
39:58I gave you false hope.
39:59Yeah, but for a minute there, it was pretty awesome.
40:06I'm going to ask you for a favor.
40:10Well, I'm not giving away my make-a-wish.
40:13Would you mind if I read you something?
40:16It's not long.
40:17That I can do.
40:29Atticus was right.
40:31One time he said you never really know a man
40:34until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.
40:37Just standing on the Radley porch was enough.
40:40The street lights were fuzzy from the fine rain that was falling.
40:43As I made my way home, I felt very old.
40:47I can't protect you from the course of a life.
40:53But you know me and you know I was born to try.
41:04It's just the symptom of the middle age of time.
41:09Why he hadn't done any of those things.
41:12Atticus, he was real nice.
41:14His hands were under my chin, pulling up the cover,
41:17tucking it around me.
41:19Most people are, Scout, when you finally see them.
41:23He turned out the light and went into Jem's room.
41:26He would be there all night,
41:28and he would be there when Jem waked up in the morning.
41:36Sounds like a good book.
41:38I could have used a spoiler alert though.
42:00That's all.
42:08He comes back anytime.
42:09He come back anytime.
42:12He comes back anytime.
42:16He comes back anytime.