9-1-1 (2018–…): Season 1, Episode 1 - Pilot - full transcript

Emergency responders must try to balance saving those who are at their most vulnerable with solving the problems in their own lives.

9-1-1.
What's your emergency?

-Help me get her some air.
-Why don't I just punch it
in its face?

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What's your emergency?

The first kind of emergency
is the one

we all have, every day.

You're looking at my emergency
right now.



I'm 42 years old.

It's been a year
since my boyfriend Tommy

broke up with me.

I'm still not over it.

My mom's a big part
of my emergency.

Alzheimer's disease,
late-stage.

Mom, I'm going to work.

Veronica's in the kitchen.

Taking care of her pretty much
takes up all my free time.

There's my number, right there,

in case you need to call me
for anything.

You don't have to tell me
every time.

-Sometimes you forget.

And then you forget you forget.



-No, you're not.

Careful, careful.
You got it. Good, good.

Ah.

-I'm healed.

You look good today.

-Mm.
-Have a good day.

-Drive carefully.
-I will.

-Ooh, you smell good.
-Woo-hoo!

Then there's
the second kind of emergency,

the kind
you never want to have,

the kind that comes
without warning--

the car crash, the fire,
the heart attack, the break-in.

That's the kind
you call me about.

I'm the actual first responder.

- My son.

He hit his head on the diving
board, and he's not breathing.

What's your address, ma'am?

Uh, 242 Beatrice Lane.

I'm in Beverly Hills.
Please hurry!

-Okay, paramedics are
on the way. -Oh, my God.

-He's turning blue! -I need you
to perform CPR on him.

Do you remember what to do?

30 chest compressions
followed by two breaths.

-Okay. -30 and two.

Okay, Buck,
start chest compressions.

Hen, start bagging him.

Got you, Captain.

Ma'am, come with me.
I need to get my team in there.

Don't worry.
He's gonna be all right.

He's gonna be all right.
Please, just take a seat.

Get some of that water out.

Coming around.
Starting compressions.

Pulse ox is on. Pad's on.

-I don't know.

-A few minutes, maybe.
-...seven, eight, nine, ten,

-11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17...
-No.

...18, 19, 20. Go.

-No rhythm.

Come on. Come on.

The crazy part is
that as soon as help arrives...

...most people just hang up.

It's coming,
it's coming, it's coming.

- Hey. Hey,
man. That's it. Get it out.

- Good job, kid.

-Good job. Good job. -All right,
kid, your mom is right here.

-Whew.
-You're gonna be okay.

Thank you.

You'll be okay.

I guess it's for the best

that I usually don't know
how it all ends.

The fireman is trying
to talk her down.

This is so messed up.

Are you friends with her?

Can you talk to her?

Well, we just get high together.

Everybody who's ever tried
something like this and survived

says the same thing:

the second they step off
that ledge, they regretted it.

I've been where you are.

I know how you feel.

Believe me.

There's hope.

Okay?

Let me buy you
a cup of coffee.

I'll tell you all about it.

I can help you.

Please. Please.

No one can help me.

- No, no, no,

no, no, no!

She jumped. She jumped.

Is it weird that I feel
more comfortable dealing

with these kinds of emergencies
than the one I have

to deal with
when I leave work and go home?

I don't know.

911. What's your emergency?

Yeah, I'm in the drive-through,

and they only gave me
six nuggets in my nine-piece,

and this bitch manager
won't give me my extra nugs.

Ma'am, it's against the law to
call 911 with a non-emergency.

Eat your nuggets,
get some perspective,

and get the hell off my line.

-In the name of
the Father, the Son,

-and the Holy Ghost.
-...Father, Son, Holy Spirit.

My last confession...

Baby, you're a firework

Come on, show 'em
what you're...

I'm so, so sorry. Um...

-I'm new.
-Mm.

-But you're familiar

with the basics
of how this all works?

I am fully authorized
to absolve any venial sins

and assign penance.

What if I have to confess
a mortal sin?

I'm kidding. Do you want
to do this out on the pews?

Oh. Yes. Please.

My last confession
was a week ago.

I was an alcoholic.

Did some drugs, too,
near the end-- painkillers.

Lost a decade of my life,
in and out of rehab.

Put on forced leave
by the fire department.

But I got myself back together,

and I've been back on the job
for 18 months.

Your last confession
was a week ago.

Weren't you already absolved?

It helps me to confess it all
once a week,

to remind myself how easy it is

for me to end up
on the wrong path.

But this week, I lost one.
A woman.

A jumper.

It must be hard
being a first responder.

The only way to survive the job
is to find a way

to cope with the ones you lose.

This is why you drank?

Like I said,
we all find ways to cope.

Some drink, some do drugs,
some gamble.

Some are sex addicts.

- We sit around

Our money's spent

Why can't you all get down?

Drive ancient cars

- Can't pay the rent

Why can't you all get down?

Drink the water,
it's a drought

How are you this scared?
This scared?

Groovyheels297?

-This is cheating.
-No, no, no.

You said if I got to you in five
minutes, you would be all mine.

Is this why they call you
Firehose?

No.

Bad reputation

Bad reputation.

Someone punch you in the face?

What? Nah, it's a...
it's a birthmark.

I dig it.

-Hey, can I, uh...

...can I get your actual number?

You're cute.

And... you're very good
at whatever it is we just did.

-Let's not ruin everything

by actually getting to know
each other.

Damn.

We're living in a golden age.

Merry Christmas.

Police, there's automatic
rifle fire at Nakatomi!

-I need backup assistance now!

Welcome to the party, pal!

I know exactly what

that polite, distant smile
means: she's bored.

One foot out the door.

This woman's so far
out of my league,

but she's just
once-in-a-lifetime.

I can't let her go.

Lots of fish in the sea.

Not with the bait he's using.

Cruel but true. Mm.

-I met her
on this new dating site

She's an adrenaline junkie,
so foreplay is me telling her

stories about running
into burning buildings

and jumping into
icy lakes and...

I'm sorry, wait.
Remind me, when is the last time

you ran into
or jumped over anything?

-I embellish a little.
-Oh. Noted.

I'm telling you, the uniform
is a major aphrodisiac.

-Clearly.

Oh, damn.

-Whew.
-Hey!

-I just... -Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Wash your hands.

We don't know
where they've been.

-I was in the neighborhood.

I was just, uh,
getting it washed.

They charge you extra
for the full detail?

Oh. Yeah, yeah.

Listen, I like you.
You're a good firefighter.

I know we got this thing--
you call me "Pops,"

and I give you a hard time
for being a dumbass kid,

we went to
a Springsteen concert together.

But this is not a family.
It's not a clubhouse.

-So I'm writing you up.
-Come on, Bobby.

See the fire, put out the fire.
The rest is blah-blah.

No. The system and the rules
are not arbitrary.

First infraction.
Two more, you're out.

Wash your hands.

-Thanks. -You know,
you're not helping him

by going easy on him.

He just needs
a little direction.

I'll remind you of that
after he gets you killed.

Anyone want to pass me a spoon,

so I can serve myself
some salad?

Oh, no.

No.

Let's do it.

-The fourth floor.

I'll race you.
-Ah, race yourself, Rambo.

I'm 50 years old.
I'm taking the elevator.

Who's Rambo?

I don't hear anything.

Look, I'm telling you,
I heard a baby crying.

Someone flushed a baby
down the toilet.

Oh, I'm not high.

Okay, I-I'm pretty high,
but it's a sativa.

You know? I-It makes you happy.

I-It doesn't
make you hallucinate.

It could've been a cat, right?

Sometimes rats get stuck
in the walls.

-Shh.

Did you hear that?

Hey, do you know what,
can you give me a stethoscope?

-Okay.
-Thanks.

Give me a pen.
Give me a Sharpie.

-Hey!
-All right.

-We need to open up this wall.
-No, no. We're being punked.

It's a tape recorder
or something. Right, Spicoli?

Mm-mm. Maybe he's right.

Maybe a mother gives birth
on the toilet and flushes it.

Okay, first of all,
that's awful.

Second, do you not know
how a toilet pipe works?

There's this piece of serpentine
pipe that takes the waste

-from the toilet to...
-If this is a premature baby,

its bones could bend
and compress like sponges.

Okay? We need to go in there.

-Stand back. I got this!
-Whoa! -Hey, hey, hey!

Did you even stop to consider
that you might hit a baby?

Yeah, I didn't think so.
Go get the saw.

Okay. I'm, uh, I'm gonna...

Try to find some common sense
while you're down there.

Fire and Rescue
were first to arrive.

Theory is that some kid
gave birth on a toilet

and tried to flush the evidence,
which got stuck in a pipe.

Theory? Has anyone
located the mother

to see if the theory's correct?

How many floors above where
you were hearing the crying?

-Uh, floor five and floor six.
-All right, let's start on five.

Knock on every door.
Don't be shy about going in

if something doesn't seem right.

Don't we need a warrant
or something?

Do I look like I'm asking you
to make an arrest?

-Let's do this.

LAPD!

LAPD. LAPD.

Hey. You have a teenage girl
living here?

LAPD. LAPD.

All right.

All right, let's get it out.

Guys, that-that pipe services

a quarter of the toilets
above us; that's gonna be messy.

Oh, shoot.

Which means,
even with the water off,

if somebody flushes
a toilet above us,

it could drown the baby.

LAPD. Open up, sir.

-Do you have a teenage girl
living here with you? -I wish.

Do not flush your toilet!
This is LAFD.

No one flush your toilets!

Do not flush your toilet!

This is LAFD!

Again, no one flush your toilet!

Hey, Hen. How's your day going?

Athena, peachy.

Do not flush your toilets!

-LAPD. Open up. LAPD! LAPD!
-This is LAFD. Please.

-LAPD.
-Nobody flush your toilets!

Okay? Please, don't.

Hey, sir. Sir!

Sir, we're looking for a girl...
Uh, hey!

Chimney.

Cut right down here
on the bottom.

All right, Chimney,
help me out, help me out.

Easy, easy, easy.

Hold it, hold it, hold it.

Up, hold it up.

-Hold it up.

All right. All right,
I see it. I see it.

-Down. Let's pull it down here
at the bottom.

-Buck, I got it.
-You got to cut right here.

-Yeah.
-Hold it still.

All right, it's off.

Get the head out, Bobby.
Get the head out.

Yeah. You got to push
from below.

All right.

Get the defibrillator.

-I'm on it.

Yeah.

-Just the lube, Buck.
-All right. Here, Bobby.

Take it, take it.

All right, give it...

All right, work that in there,
work that in there.

-Got it up there. I got it.
I got it. -All right, guys.

Wow, wow. Wow.

This is gonna be
a scoop and run.

Hen, get the ambulance ready.

I'm ready here.

Okay, ready?

Come on.

-It's moving.
-It's coming. It's coming.

Oh, my God.

-Stay on the shoulders.
-I got it. I got it.

-I got it. -Pull, pull.
All right. Geez.

Okay, pull her out.
Pull her out. Pull her out.

-Pull her out.
-I got it. I got it. I got it.

All right, she's not breathing.
Starting CPR.

Come on.

Come on. Come on.

-Maybe her airway's blocked.
-Yeah. -I-I'll get the, uh...

Yep.

-Get the pump. -Buck, come on!
-I'm coming! I'm...

Yeah, she's not breathing.
Bobby, it's-it's not working.

Come on.

-Come on.
-I got you.

-I got you.

-There we go. There we go.
-Excellent.

There we go.

Yeah.

All right.
Okay, wrap her up.

-Let's go.

-Down to the lobby. Here we go.
-All right, let's go, let's go.

-Guess not.

Sorry, Cap.
Come on, come on, come on.

Yo, give her to me.
Yo, come on, I'm twice as fast.

Come on.

-All right, you go.
-Okay.

I got you.

I got you. You're gonna be okay.

You're gonna be great.

What happened?!

What you want?!

No.

MAN:
Marika.

Your daughter just had a baby.

We have to get her
to the hospital.

Go get ready! Get ready!

-Come on, move it!
-Come on, get ready!

-Yeah, I got you.
-Let's go.

-Make way, folks. Make way.
-Let's go, let's go!

Make way.

Hold up! Hold up!
I got another one coming.

Yo, is that the mother? No.

-Screw her! Look what she did!
-She's bleeding out!

-She's a child!

He is refusing to take...

-Okay, Bob.
-All right, all right, come on.

-Come on.
-Marika.

Come on, guys. Hurry up.

Okay? Hurry up!

Yo, if this baby dies,
it's on you.

Marika.

Hospital ETA, five minutes.

Hang in.

-Gonna go over here.

Oh, yeah.

-Okay.

Oh, yeah.

Whoa. All right.

O2 sat 59.

-I can't get a pulse.
-I'm so sorry.

Is she gonna die?

Come here.
Give me your hand.

It's all right. It's okay.

Here we go.

All right.

See? Told you we'd make it,
didn't I?

Come on. Oh, here we go.

You ready

Oh. Hey.

They're gonna
take care of you now, okay?

You're gonna be okay now,
aren't you?

-Get the baby to the NICU.

-Get the mother hooked up
in room four. -All right.

I'm gonna see you in there.
All right, come on, Bobby.

-Let's go. -Hey, hey, hold on.
Where you going?

That baby is alive
because of us.

Don't-don't we have
some kind of obligation?

I'll give them a call;
we'll be lucky

if they tell us if she's okay.

There's nothing more we can do.

We did our jobs
very well today, so far.

Just be proud of that.
Now it's their turn.

-Hey!

-You do not get to choose
who lives and who dies.

'Cause I was
under the impression

that kind of was my job.

That mother was no less
of a child than her baby.

You're gonna get someone killed.

-Well, maybe, but not today.
-Yeah, you keep making jokes.

I promise you,
the next time you screw up,

it'll be your last.

What?

Get in the truck.

Good morning, everyone.

You want a waffle?

Uh-uh. Uh-uh.
No whispering at the table.

You got something to say,
just speak up.

Would it be okay
if only one of you guys

came to family day
at school tomorrow?

-Because you can't stand

being in the same room together,
anyway.

It makes everyone uncomfortable.

Are you getting a divorce?

-Of course not, sweetheart.
-You're lying.

-Hey, watch your mouth.
-Baby.

Married people have problems
all the time.

But you two never fight or argue

unless it's something
really bad.

-I want to tell them.
-Michael.

My therapist said tell them
when they're ready.

Well-well, I'm saying
that I'm not ready.

-Come here. Come here, baby.
-Michael.

Kids, your dad
has been struggling

-with something his entire life.

But...

with the courage
that I get from being your dad,

-the way that you love me
and see me... -Please.

...I feel strong enough
to be honest about it.

I'm gay.

So you are getting a divorce.

No, no, sweetheart. We're not
even talking about that.

May, baby, y-your dad just
told me a couple of weeks ago.

The grandmas are gonna whisper
about us in church now.

And the kids at school
are gonna find out,

-and maybe beat Harry and I up
about it. -MICHAEL: No. No.

Your mother and I will not let
that happen. Do you understand?

Can't you just keep it a secret?

I'm fine with whatever.

I just don't want
anybody else to know.

May, wait a minute.
Wait a minute. Look...

Don't look at me like that.

I have nothing to be ashamed of.

You know, I get that
you feel good about coming out.

-Good for you.
-Please.

But don't think you can hide

behind that pride
when it comes to me.

You lied to me.

-Oh, God. I'm sorry.
-Get-- Don't you touch me!

-Don't you touch me! How could
you do this to me?! -Okay.

-You should have told me
from the beginning!

-I didn't have to tell you. You
already knew.

-But you just went along
to get along. -Oh, I'm sorry

if I thought
that the fact that my husband

didn't pay other women any mind
meant he was true to me!

Look, you even said it yourself.

I don't lay you like other men.

You humiliated me

just so you wouldn't
humiliate yourself.

And if you don't see that,
you're the one that's in denial.

-Yes.

Hey, you know,
denial worked just fine

when you were
a 37-year-old single woman

whose biological clock
was running out.

You were perfectly happy to deny

what you could clearly see
about me.

And I said
that I wanted those kids, too.

Don't you forget that!

What is that?

You've had it, like,
a million times, Mom.

Don't think I like it.

-Well...
-Why don't you save it

for when your dad
gets back from work, hmm?

He's not coming home, is he?

-No.
-Oh.

-Yeah.

Mm, yeah.

For, like, ten years.

-Oh, sorry. I'm so sorry.
-Don't be sorry.

-You're just having
a tough day today. -Hmm.

And Veronica's here.

Veronica,
you're half an hour late.

I have to get to work.
You can't keep doing this,

-or I'm gonna have to hire
somebody else. -Whatever.

I work for SSI.
I can't be fired,

just moved off to someone else.

Wow, I really love
that go-getter attitude, V.

-I love you, Mom.
-Love you, darling.

You take care
of yourself today, okay?

Bye, Mom.

My snake.

L.A. fire!

All right, guys,
check all these rooms.

Anybody here?

L.A. fire!

Wow.

Oh, my God.

Bobby, I can't do snakes.
They scare the crap out of me.

That scene from Conan the
Barbarian with the giant snake,

it traumatized me for life.

-I-I can't.

Conan the Barbarian.
Arnold Schwarzenegger.

1982. Geez.

Dude, as far as I'm concerned,

the world began
the day I was born.

BOBBY: Guys, in here.
Back here, guys, now.

Oh, my God.

-We got to help her get
some air, guys. -Oh, my...

-Oh, my God. Oh, I...
This is not good.

Bobby, it's no use. That
thing is, like, ten feet long.

Its constriction strength is,
like, 50 pounds per square inch.

Oh, my God, I'm gonna start
calling you "Snake-ipedia."

-Stop it.
-All I'm saying

is that you'd stand
a better chance

of tearing down a cement wall
with your bare hands.

Why don't I just punch it
in its face?

You can't punch it in the face,
Buck. It's a snake.

It's not some guy
at an El Torito happy hour.

Look, I have Dilaudid.

We can inject the snake.
It'll pass right out.

How much time
is that gonna take?

Minutes.
And minutes we don't have.

I think we're gonna
have to put it down.

-Kill it.
No! No, um, no!

-Kill it. Just kill it.
-It's a snake.

-It's doing what nature intended
for it to do.

Nobody told this fool to bring
a snake into her house!

Yeah, well, I'll make a donation
to PETA for you.

-Crap.
It's getting really tight.

Okay, stand back.

-We don't have time for this!
-Buck! -No!

Okay.

Wow. Why is that always

the first option for you
white boy, macho tough guys?

Guys, I am totally gonna take
credit for this with Tatiana.

It's gonna get me laid
for a week. Thank you.

Oh, Spartacus.

Yeah, well,
it was him or you, and, uh,

when faced
with a situation like that,

I always choose to save
the more attractive one.

Is that right?

-Oh, yeah, that's right.
-Okay.

Hard pass. I'm gonna skip the
part where the two idiots flirt.

You can expect a visit
from animal control.

Hey, Buck.

-Oh.
-Ah.

Really?
-Um...

I'm a collector.
I'm not a hoarder.

I think you should
probably leave.

Um, did you follow me here?

The truck has
a GPS beacon, moron.

-Ugh.
-No. W...

Just call me later
if you're free.

I'll be at home. Alone.

You're fired.

What? Wait. That's not fair.
You said I got three strikes.

Doesn't matter. You've made
this choice yourself,

and you rubbed it in my face.

The same exact infraction
two days after I wrote you up.

It's not 1950 anymore, Buck.
We work with women side by side.

When you swing your dick around,
you disrespect them.

Wait, Bobby! Bobby, I-I think
I may be a sex addict.

Self-diagnosed.

You think this is a joke?

-No.

-I'm not joking.
-How much does your kit weigh

when you're fully geared up?

-Uh, I don't, I don't know.

-60 pounds, give or take.
-Right. 60 pounds.

So when you choose this life,
you find a way

to leave everything behind you,
except that 60 pounds.

I don't care if you got problems
with your wife, with money,

with alcohol,
with keeping it in your pants.

All that stuff weighs you down,
it slows you down,

and if we lose a couple seconds,
people die.

So, you want to disrespect
yourself, that's fine with me.

You want to disrespect these
women that you chase around,

that's on them, but you are done
disrespecting our firehouse

and this fire department.

No, Bobby. Bobby!
I need this job!

Look, I love this job.

Don't do this to me.

I don't have anything else.

I'm sorry, kid.
I said you're done.

I guess you heard?

Yeah.

For what it's worth,
everyone thinks it sucks.

-It's my own fault.
-Yeah.

Everyone thinks that, too.

I'll be honest.

When Bobby first
brought you on board,

I told him he should just
get a Dalmatian instead.

But I'm legit sorry
to see you go.

You got some skills.

Just not a lot of discipline.

Look, hey, um, I don't suppose

you could maybe
talk to him for me?

Ladder,
medic. 10-36 auto emergency.

Hey, tough break, kid.

Ladder, medic.
10-36 auto emergency.

Hen, let's roll.

Okay, Lily, my name is Abby.
I'm gonna try to help you.

-I don't know.

-We just moved here.

-Do you know what street
you live on? -Um, Lambert.

Okay, Lambert.

It's a brown house!

Lily?

-Shoot.

Residential break-in.

Caller is a nine-year-old
female, home alone.

No GPS on her phone,
no street address.

She did have a street name--
Lambert.

There are three Lamberts
in the greater L.A. area:

Boyle Heights,
Santa Fe Springs and Winnetka.

-Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I can hear you.

-They got in.

-I'm up in my room.

Okay. That's okay.
What is the name of your city?

W-Winnetka.

Okay. We got to start
pinging cell towers.

-Pinging towers in the Valley.
-Now, listen.

I need you to stay on the phone.
Don't hang up.

We're gonna try to find you.

I've got multiple
daytime break-ins

in this area over
the last couple of months.

Lily, is there anything near you

that looks like it would have
your address on it?

Mail or anything like that?

Can you look outside?

LILY:
I can't see any numbers.

Towers narrow it
to a quarter mile.

I know you said your house is
brown. Is there anything else

All available units,

residential break-in
on Lambert Road, Winnetka,

somewhere between
the 100 and 1500 blocks

of Chanel and Hadley.

Two-story
single family dwelling.

Brown house, white trim,

garage door is white.
Child alone in the home.

Caller says there's a pink
girl's five-speed bike

sitting on the front porch.

You got to be kidding me.

I'm in Steven Spielberg land.

-I'm here.

What's your mother's name?

Emma.

Emma Coughlin.

Okay, we got 14 Emma Coughlins.

None of them in Winnetka.

ABBY:
Do you know her phone number?

-Uh, it's in the phone.
-Here's what I want you to do.

Do not hang up the phone.
Look at the menu in the phone,

and read me
what the number says.

-I think so.

-Stay on the line. I'm gonna
call your mom now. -Okay.

It's ringing in her room.

Sometimes she forgets it
on the charger.

ABBY: Officer, maybe if you put
on your siren,

I could determine where you are
in relation to her.

-I could guide you to her.
-I don't think we want

these guys knowing
that the cops are here.

This area's had a spate
of daytime break-ins recently,

and one homicide.

We need to find this girl.

Maybe we still can.

Hey. What's up, Thena?

I need a favor.

Think you can loan me
a fire truck?

Um, it's kind of in use
at the moment. Why?

I'll have something for you
in less than five.

She sent you, huh?

I was available.

All right. No heroics.

Don't go chasing waterfalls.

I don't know what that means.

Nobody thought you would.

Lily?

Abby, I'm downstairs.

What are you doing downstairs?

Petey! Petey!

Petey! There's a kid
in the house who's got a phone.

That's twice you said my name.

Now we got to find it.

I'll get this one's phone.

Just need the phone.

It's the cops!

-We've got it.
-That's it.

You just passed her, cowboy.

Relax. It's just a fire truck.

Come on, kid.
I just want the phone.

Oh, yeah, I see the pink bike.

-Yeah.

You, uh, you can't go
in there right now.

Is there a fire?
-No, no.

-No, ma'am, no fire. Just come.

Just get behind the truck, okay?
Come on.

PETEY: Come out, kid.
We just want the phone.

-Petey!

I got her!

Officer, how close are you?

Close.

Abby!

Petey! Petey, Petey!

Petey! Petey!

Peter! Petey! Petey!

-Peter! Petey!

This is 911 operator
Abby Clark.

I need to explain something
to you about this emergency.

This emergency is yours.
I have dispatched the police

to your exact location.

I know exactly what road
they're gonna go down,

I know what door
they're gonna walk into,

and I am prepared
to help you escape.

-Because I don't care

about you at all, but I care
about that little girl.

So you have exactly two seconds
to make a decision here.

You can either walk away
from her and walk away

from the police,
or you can sit there and wait

for whatever hellfire is about
to be brought down on your head.

-PETEY: Get the kid.

No! No.

No! No! No!

What are you doing?! No!

No! No!

Okay, walk out the back door.

There's a road behind the house.

Back door.

What about the bike, man?

-Forget the bike.

Let me out! Please!

-Yeah, I see it.

-Because I have a grid

of the entire neighborhood
in front of me.

-You're gonna go over the wall.
-Better not be any cops

-on the other side.
-There aren't.

Just needed you
out of the house.

Get on the ground!

Get on the ground now!

Petey!

-You lying bitch!
-Down! Down!

Let me out!

Fireman Buckley,
what's going on there?

-I don't know, uh...
-LILY: Stop it!

Please! Help!

-Lily!
-Oh, crap.

-Help me!

Ow.

Mom!

-Lily!
-Mom!

-Oh, my God.

ABBY:
Officer.

Fireman Buckley,
what's happening?

Are the suspects in custody?

Attention, all units.

Suspect on a motorcycle,
heading east on Lambert.

-East on Lambert.

Move! Move!

Cover, cover, cover!

ABBY:
Fireman Buckley?

Don't you move!

-Don't you move. -ABBY: Fireman
Buckley, what's happening there?

Fireman Buckley,
what's happening there?!

-Ow, I'm hurt!
-No, you just think you are.

I heard a gunshot.
Is Where is she?

The little girl? No, she's good.

She's back with her mom,
and you should be here.

Oh, my God.

I feel like I am.

Wow. Um...

Okay, well,
I can't thank you enough.

I-I... I'm so grateful.

-You saved that little girl,
and... -No, you did.

You kept her in the game
long enough for us to find her.

You're the real hero here.

Well, I appreciate you
saying that.

Thank you.

I know what this looks like.

Looks like you took the engine
out in your street clothes.

I didn't really
have time to change.

Athena Grant called me,

wanted to tell me
what an asset you are.

Told her she was half right.

Athena.

Uh, kids get home
from school okay?

Yeah, yeah.

They're inside
doing their homework.

Everything okay?

Yeah. Just checking in.

You giving me another chance?

You've used all your chances;
so have I.

Because somehow I have failed
to communicate to you

how lucky we are
to do what we do.

Pressure...

You're wrong, Bobby.

I absolutely do get what
a privilege it is to serve here.

And you know what?
You were right to fire me.

I was a punk.

Uh, I still am one.

But I'm a punk
who understands what he lost.

Just needed you to know that.

I hope you mean that.

So are we talking again now?

No.

You want us
to wait for you for dinner?

Tomorrow gets me higher...

Yeah. Yeah.

Go get dressed.

Da-da-da

Ooh

Da-da-da-da-da

Okay...

I think I'm not fired.

Your shift's not over yet.

Chipping around

-Kick my brains
around the floor

These are the days,
it never rains but it pours...

People on streets

Ee-da-de-da-de

People on streets

Ee-da-de-da-de-de-da

It's the terror of knowing

-What this world is about

-Watching some good friends

Screaming, "Let me out!"

Tomorrow

Gets me higher,
higher, higher

Pressure on people

People on streets,
under pressure...

You know, it takes
a certain kind of person

to swim in the pain
of the world and not get wet.

To run towards danger,
rather than run away from it.

And for those of us
that choose this life,

there's no place
we'd rather be.

911. What's your emergency?

Captioned by
Media Access Group at WGBH

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