Grey's Anatomy (2005–…): Season 12, Episode 4 - Old Time Rock and Roll - full transcript
Owen suggests the interns learn about breaking bad news to patients' families.
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¶ How can I go? ¶
the human brain.
This is the reason
I asked Dr. grey
if I could fill in for her
this morning.
Nature makes a beautiful machine.
[ All murmuring ]
¶ Wake me up when the voices
die ¶ don't you think?
Meredith:
You might be surprised,
but anatomy classes can be
uncomfortable for surgeons.
Ready to take it apart?
We're trained to
put bodies back together.
We prefer our tissue
warm, alive.
See how easily
the blade slices through?
Comes apart like warm butter.
This big ball of jelly
is the essential element that makes you...
[ Stomach gurgles ]
You.
H-here's a fun fact.
If left to decompose,
the brain actually liquifies.
[ Gags ] Usually when a surgeon
is staring at dead tissue...
[ Laughter ] Look out!
Was it something I said?
[ Laughter ]
¶ We'll grow apart ¶ ...It means
that something is very, very wrong.
¶ Baby, let's blame the
planets ¶ [ Thudding ]
¶ Make a new start ¶ oh, god.
¶ Changing as if we meant it ¶
oh, god, please, please.
Please, please, please.
Oh, no, no.
- No!
- Whoa.
Hey.
Oh, we had sex?
We had sex.
Yeah, we had so much sex.
Yeah, we did. And it was great.
I don't mean to rush out,
but, uh...
There are
people in this house, and, um,
we had sex and you're an intern...
Yeah.
So you... You have to get out.
Yeah, okay. Bye.
Stop. You...
There might be people out there.
There might be kids.
¶ Running, running, running,
running behind, yeah ¶
you have kids?
My sister has kids.
My sister could see you.
I mean, I don't hear anyone.
I think we're okay.
¶ We'll grow apart ¶
are you sure?
¶ Baby, let's blame the planets ¶ yeah.
We're fine.
¶ Make a new start ¶
¶ changing as if we meant it ¶
well.
¶ Where can I leave my father's ride?
¶ good morning.
¶ Wake me up
when the voices die ¶
¶ do me like
you might know my mind ¶
¶ carry me to the other side ¶
¶ running, running, running,
running behind, yeah ¶
¶ I'm always really running
behind, yo ¶
¶ running, running, running,
running behind, yeah ¶
¶ I'm alwa... ¶
- hey.
- Good morning.
Amelia: You said you were drunk.
Can I at least ask
if you used a condom?
Shut... Up.
Look, there is a jumbo box of
condoms under the bathroom sink.
I share. They are for everyone.
Jumbo? Seriously?
I was being optimistic.
Wait.
That was you making
all that noise last night?
I thought that was Amelia.
Well, you aren't shy.
And you have a filthy mouth.
Okay, can we not
talk about this?
Please. I am begging you.
So, the intern was good in bed.
Intern? What intern?
Maggie, what intern?
Alex can hear us.
Alex doesn't care about this.
Do you care, Alex?
Do I care about any
of this conversation? No.
Did he visit ladytown?
Because I find if they don't
go down to ladytown
the first time,
there should be no next time.
- She's right about that.
- No more talking!
If either of you
says another word,
I will jump out of this car
while it is moving.
And ladytown
is just as bad as ladyplace.
- Geez. So sensitive.
- Just trying to be nice.
Take an interest. God.
Hey, what time do you want me
at your house tonight?
Why are you
coming to my house tonight?
You're having a dinner party.
Oh, the dinner party.
No, that's not tonight.
No, that's weeks away.
It's on the...
Dinner party's on the 14th,
Alex.
Today is the 14th.
You people need
adult supervision.
I don't think I'm gonna go to
this dinner thing tonight.
I think I'm gonna work.
Jo, they don't hate you.
They don't like me.
They're your friends.
They're my bosses.
It's like I'm on call
all the time.
They... they treat me
like a resident,
not like a person,
not like your girlfriend.
'Cause they only ever
see you here
'cause you never
go to their parties.
Go to the party.
I want them to know you.
It'll be fun, I promise.
Fun like a barium enema.
What?
Your boyfriend's little posse
controls this place.
Jo, you have an invite
to the inner circle.
You go to that party,
you make friends
with the chiefs of neuro,
cardio, and general,
you would be unstoppable.
Every surgery in this hospital
would be yours.
[ Chuckling ]
That... that dinner...
I'd kill for an invite.
You're a little bit scary
right now.
Edwards, my dear.
Let's roll.
Maybe I'll get an invite
after all.
First neuro, then the world.
He didn't mean it, right?
I mean, you don't just toss the
word "divorce" out there like that.
It was just
the heat of the moment, right?
Maybe he was just mad, or...
I'm the one who's mad.
"Divorce"? No.
I refuse to accept it. Refuse.
Do you think he's going to
that thing tonight?
[ Sighing ] Oh, god. Probably.
Are you going?
Please tell me you're going.
I don't know.
I mean, Callie's gonna be there.
Since when's that been an issue?
It's not. It's just...
I don't want to make her new
girlfriend feel uncomfortable.
You know, intimidated by me. Mm.
I mean,
if she's even bringing her.
I don't know
if she's bringing her. Do you?
Well, she's right over there.
Do you want me to ask her if
she's bringing her girlfriend?
Yes, please.
You ask about Jackson,
I'll ask about penny.
10-4.
Oh, hey, um,
about that thing tonight,
I'm not so sure
any of them cook.
Should I bring food just in case
so none of us starve?
You know,
I think it's gonna be fine.
Um, do you know if...
Do you know if
Jackson's coming tonight?
- Uh, no idea.
- Are you bringing penny?
Oh.
I hadn't...
Uh, I didn't know
if you'd be okay with that.
And, uh... yeah,
I didn't want it to be awkward
or uncomfortable for
her, you know. M...
Okay? Me?
Mm-hmm.
Oh, I'm fine.
Are you kidding?
No, bring her. Totally.
Bring her, 'cause,
I mean, I want to meet her.
I mean, I think that we all
want to meet her.
Yeah. I mean, not just me.
Mostly me 'cause I...
I know that I would really love
to meet her.
- Yeah.
- I mean...
Mm-hmm.
I will see if she's available.
Cool, cool.
- Mm-hmm.
- Yeah.
See? I can do this.
I can do this. I'm excited.
It's cool, I'm cool.
Yeah, cool people
don't say they're cool.
Hannah: Rachel bishop, 32,
post-op day one following
decompressive craniotomy.
Isn't able to respond verbally,
but is arousable
and following motor commands.
Excellent.
She is the perfect candidate
for early ambulation.
You want to get her on her feet?
She just had surgery yesterday.
That's exactly the point.
Uh, new studies are showing
that if we get neuro patients
up and moving
as soon as possible after
surgery, they recover faster.
They have a greater
return to function.
But the protocol is that we...
That is the great thing about
being head of the department.
I decide what is
and is not protocol.
Yes, ma'am.
Mm-hmm.
Uh... Call Rachel's mother and
suggest she not come in today.
It is gonna be a little rough.
Uh, Dr. Shepherd, sorry,
but Dr. Hunt said to round up
all available interns.
Why? What's going on?
We're about to get hit
with a silver flood.
I need fiber-optic intubation
on standby for each bed.
- What do we got?
- Silver flood.
Okay, I need vitamin k,
warm fluids,
blankets, and bair huggers.
Uh, what's a silver flood?
Callie: A silver flood
is a fracture feast.
I need slings, splints,
and pelvic binders,
as many as you can
get your hands on.
- Silver flood?
- Silver flood.
Oh, and page every
on-call X-ray tech.
Haven't seen one of these
since mercy west.
This will be fun.
Yes, but what is it exactly?
A silver flood is no
regular day in the pit.
Patients might be agitated,
angry, possibly even violent.
Use soothing tones,
but do not speak too softly.
Do not administer
unnecessary fluids.
If you see bruising,
think bleeding.
No narcotics, no benzos.
Any questions?
Uh, y-yes,
what is a silver flood?
¶¶
[ indistinct talking ]
Harold: I spent good money
on that damn cruise,
and the shuttle bus crashed
before we even reached the port.
Damn driver was fiddling with
his phone the entire damn way.
So, he was... He was texting?
Not on your life.
The way he was staring
at that thing,
it had to be porno.
Bailey: All right, call the O.R.
Tell them they need to have it
ready for me yesterday.
Go!
Oh, silver flood. [ Chuckles ]
Well, what did you think it was?
Why do you need a code word
for a bunch of old people?
What? We're not old people.
We're senior citizens.
Disrespectful.
Calling people old.
Who do you think you are?
I'm not old.
You don't know old.
You are rude.
That's why. Have fun with that.
I want to speak
to your supervisor.
[ Sighs ]
[ Siren wailing ]
Thiazide for the blood pressure,
metformin for my diabetes.
I also take another pill
for my arthritis.
- Great, so...
- I'm not done.
Also some kind of cholesterol
pill and a baby aspirin.
That's it.
[ Clears throat ]
Eddie, are you sure
you're not forgetting
some of the medications
you might've been on,
like, say for, pfft,
I don't know, uh,
erectile dysfunction?
Do I look like the kind of guy
who needs to pop a pill
to pop a Woody?
Well, you know,
I just got to ask.
'Cause if... if you were
on one of those meds
and you didn't tell us,
then that could have
a very bad reaction
based on any medications
we might give you.
You could have
a drop in blood pressure,
you could have a stroke,
you could have a heart attack.
You need proof?
Watch this.
- No! No, no, no!
- That's okay.
That's... Please don't do that.
Mrs. margraff, we are
going to take you up to C.T.
And have you checked out, okay?
I'm not a Mrs., dear.
The gentleman and I
are just shacking up.
Oh. [ Chuckles ]
H-how's my girl?
I'm fine, Abe.
Settle down.
Check his left hip.
He took a spill in February,
hasn't been the same since.
Hasn't slowed him down, though.
[ Laughs ]
[ Chuckles ]
Wait, look.
D-don't bother with me.
Just make sure
Gabby's all right.
These girls know
what they're doing.
I-I-I'm just banged up is all.
Okay, so tell the nurses
to monitor him
and keep him hydrated.
Abe, we are going to
take Gabby up
and get her checked out, okay?
Okay. I-I'll be right here,
gabs, okay?
Will... will you...
Will you bring her back here?
- Absolutely.
- Take a nap, you old bastard!
Rachel, we just need to get you
to the edge of the bed.
We get there, we can stop,
and I know it hurts, but
you got to keep your eyes open.
Brody, hold her lines steady.
Watch her I.V.
Come on. Just a little further.
[ Groaning ]
- Maybe we should stop?
- Not yet.
We don't stop until we get her
to the edge of the bed
or reach
her point of intolerance.
Point of intolerance?
How will we know?
[ Vomits ]
Uh, I think that's pretty clear.
Okay.
We're gonna let you relax now.
You did very, very well.
Let's get her cleaned up.
Stop.
I got it.
[ Rachel breathes heavily ]
[ Sighs ]
I'm gonna need you to
take the lead
on Rachel bishop's next session.
Me?
Yeah, I have a full board,
there's a silver flood,
and if we miss a session,
we have to stop the treatment.
Well, would that
really be so bad?
Do you have something
you need to say?
I...
Don't think I'm comfortable
with this course of treatment.
I see.
We are obviously
pushing her way past
what she can handle right now,
and I just feel...
Edwards.
This protocol
is extremely difficult.
It feels traumatic.
But you have to look at it
like surgery.
Surgery is traumatic.
It is so, so hard
on the human body.
But in most cases, it is
a patient's best chance to live,
to be normal again, to heal.
This is Rachel's chance to heal.
While she vomits.
Find me when you're done.
Woman over P.A.:
Portable X-ray tech to E.R.
Portable X-ray tech to E.R.
[ Sighs ]
Excuse me, sweetheart.
Oh. It's Dr. sweetheart.
But what can I do for you?
Well, my lady friend,
Gabby margraff,
they said they were
taking her for a p.T.
Or something or... Or a p.P.?
- A C.T.?
- That's the ticket.
Oh, boy. You know, I haven't
seen her since, but I-i...
And I-i-i-i-i don't want to be
a bother,
but nobody's said anything.
Okay, well, hold on. Let me see.
Um...
Oh, yeah.
Okay, so according to this,
she's still in C.T.
Okay.
Oh, okay, good, good.
Great. Is there anything else
I can do for you?
Y-you got jell-o here, right?
We do. Indeed.
Diaphragmatic contour
is abnormal on the left.
It could be a rupture.
Any abdominal strain
and she could pop her guts
right into her left lung.
I think there might be
a splenic hematoma also,
but I won't know
until I get in there.
Any way you can do it
without a scar?
[ Chuckles ]
We'll do the best we can, Gabby,
okay? You just sit tight.
[ Gasps ]
Are you okay?
Yeah.
What's the matter?
Um, no, I'm having flashbacks.
Um... Sex flashbacks.
Oh. Oh.
Hey, Wilson, would you
step outside, please?
¶ Now I'm not tryin'
to be rude ¶
¶ but hey, pretty girl, I'm feelin' you
¶ okay, you were saying about the sex?
Meredith.
There was so much sex.
Hot, hot sex.
Everything hurts.
My back, my hip,
the top of my head.
I feel like I'm 80.
Oh, my god. He's an intern.
Who does that?
Who screws the interns?
What kind of person does that?
[ Laughs ]
The father of my children.
¶ Hot and fresh out the
kitchen ¶ oh, Meredith.
Okay, I didn't mean... you know
I didn't mean... I'm very sorry.
It's fine. Just relax.
You think
you're the first person
to have inappropriate work sex?
We all do it
all over the hospital.
I mean, we even
did it in here once.
¶ Bounce, bounce, bounce,
bounce, bounce ¶
you know,
I haven't thought about it.
Sex. ¶ Now it's like
murder she wrote ¶
I haven't thought about it
at all since...
That last morning...
The morning of the day he died.
¶ No more hoping and wishing, I'm 'bout to
take my key ¶ [ Sighs ] Mags, I'm a widow.
Meredith, I'm so sorry.
We don't have to
talk about this.
I'm... I can't believe
I even opened my stupid mouth.
Do you want me to get Alex
or something?
- I'm so sorry.
- No, no.
It's... it's... I'm a widow.
I mean, like in the books
and the movies.
You don't think that
that happens, but it does.
It's just...
I'm closed for business.
Vagina city's a ghost town.
Orgasm train doesn't
roll through here anymore.
¶ Cristal popping in the stretch navigator
¶ that part of my life is over.
You know, eventually, you'll...
When you're ready...
No. I don't want to.
It's fine.
I'm okay. I'm good.
So, tell me about the hot,
hot sex with the hot intern
and how he did you sideways
because I am widow grey,
dead inside.
[ Laughs ]
Honey, no.
That is the saddest story
I've ever heard.
Gabby.
Honey, you're breaking my heart.
The orgasm train
should never stop running.
I've had an orgasm every day
since I was 15.
Well, when I was 15,
I was scrapbooking with my mom.
We had nine different kinds
of glitter.
Now, see, that is hot to me.
Orgasms are wonderful.
I had two this morning
before we got on the bus.
¶ It's the freakin' weekend ¶
[ Chuckles ]
[ Flatline ]
- How long has he been down?
- 10 minutes.
I ran through
the acls v-fib protocol twice.
Okay, charge to 200.
What happened?
He was having chest pains,
so I gave him some nitro.
His b.P. Bottomed out
all at once.
I'm worried he was on e.D. Meds.
We asked him.
Well, was he? Clear!
- What happened?
- He insisted he wasn't.
We asked him several times.
We told him what could happen.
- Clear!
- He probably lied.
Why would he do that
when we told him?
People can be stubborn,
even when it's
the worst thing for them.
- We told him.
- Time of death 12:19.
What do...
What do we do now?
You notify the morgue.
- That's it?
- That's it.
[ Woman speaks indistinctly
over P.A. system ]
Excuse me. Can you help me?
They said my father
was in the accident.
Can you tell me
where I can find him?
What's his name?
Edward squire. Eddie.
He only answers to Eddie.
Uh... Okay.
I...I should, uh...
You know, I'm gonna...
Let's find someone
who can talk to you...
What? Why?
Is he hurt?
He, um... I'm really sorry,
but I don't think I should be...
Just tell me.
He h-had a heart attack.
Oh.
Is he... is he all right?
Can you take me to him?
I-I can't. I can't.
What do you mean you can't?
Just tell me where he is.
Your father's... He...
He passed away.
What?
We think he lied about
the medication he was taking.
What are you talking about?
He's dead?
- My father is dead?
- Please just come with me.
And we can find someone who
can... don't you touch me!
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
Sir, sir.
He said my father was dead, and
he won't tell me where he is!
I am so sorry.
He said my dad was a liar.
Sir, come sit down.
I'm gonna tell you
everything that happened
and I will take you to your dad,
okay?
Okay. Please, please.
Get him a chair and bring
him some water. Right.
[ Crying ]
Thank you. That was...
What did you do?
What did you say to him?
- Dr. Hunt, I...
- What the hell did you say?!
I thought the point of
a singles cruise
was to meet other singles.
Exactly.
Where do you think I met Gabby?
Five years ago
almost to the day.
- Really?
- Mm.
Absotively.
[ Chuckles ]
I didn't even want to go.
But my sister
wouldn't get off my back.
"Go out, meet people.
Don't just sit at home
in that chair."
Mm-hmm. It's a nice chair?
The best.
Oh, you press a button
and your feet go up.
And there's a...
There's a warmer in the seat.
And... and... and a little cubby
for the remote.
[ Gasps ] Sounds like a dream.
Now I'm living a new dream.
I got the chair. I got the girl.
Here, but let me
show you something.
Oh, Abe, this is all too sudden.
I barely know you.
I just met you.
[ Chuckles ]
You know, you're a wise ass.
[ Laughs ]
But I... but I like that.
Mm.
It's beautiful.
Gabby's beautiful.
I was gonna propose on the boat.
On the third night,
there's this big dance
in the main dining room.
Huge ice sculptures
and a dance band and everything.
That's where I first saw her.
Whoa.
The dress she was wearing.
[ Chuckles ]
I got so dizzy,
I-i just had to sit down.
I closed my eyes for a second,
and when I opened them...
[ pager beeping ]
Oh, gosh dang it.
Abe, I'm so sorry. Duty calls.
Oh, you kidding? Go.
You got
more important things to do
than to listen to my stories.
I am getting
the rest of that story.
I will be back a.S.A.P.
Bring another jell-o with you.
Oh, okay. Um, wait, hold on.
Raspberry or lime?
Surprise me.
Okay.
Okay, Gabby, we're going to
put you under now, okay?
- I need to tell Abe.
- Abe is downstairs.
We're gonna tell him
everything that's going on.
No, I need to tell him.
He'll crap his pants
if he thinks I'm in trouble.
I can grab an intern to...
Bless his heart, he may
actually crap his pants.
He's 90.
[ Monitor beeping ]
Okay, the sats are down to 87.
Gabby, I'm gonna need you to
take some deep breaths.
Let's get her under right now.
Wilson, go down
and find someone to tell Abe
that Gabby's in surgery
and she is just fine.
I was gonna scrub in.
Wilson,
we have enough hands here.
Go cover the pit.
You'll see him when you wake up.
Listen, Rachel,
I know this is hard,
but this is
how you're gonna heal.
Okay?
Here we go.
[ Grunts ]
All right, let's try for a step,
Rachel.
Can you give me a step?
- One step.
- [ Groans ]
You give me a step, you get in
that chair, we can stop.
Step, the chair, we stop.
- Aah!
- It's okay.
Come on. We got you.
You can do it. It's okay.
Come on. Step, chair, stop.
It's okay.
I got you.
Step, chair, stop.
That's enough.
That's enough for now.
Put her down.
Dr. Edwards?
That's okay.
That's good, Rachel.
That's really good.
Let's get you back to bed.
Let's get her in bed.
We haven't reached
her point of intolerance.
Dr. shep... i said we're done.
Okay.
Legs.
You did so good.
You did really good.
Really good, okay?
Want to go
grab some food with me?
I have no appetite.
Shepherd's making me
torture a patient
who just had brain surgery.
Because she likes you.
Got a funny way of showing it.
At least she let's you
torture a patient.
Grey and Pierce
just threw me out of the O.R.
They hate me.
You know,
I need to be more like you.
You make the system your bitch.
If I could get an attending
to look at me
the way that Shepherd
looks at you...
Okay, Rachel, Dr. Edwards said
that we just need to
get you into this chair,
so that's what we're gonna do.
All right.
Okay. Ready?
[ Rachel moaning ]
Wilson?
A word, please?
I'll be back.
Dr. Shepherd,
I was just
about to get Rachel on her feet.
Where the hell is Edwards?
Owen: There were 40 passengers
on the bus.
Eight of them died en route.
We've lost six in the E.R.
already,
and many more are in surgery
or in critical care
in the I.C.U.
All of these peoples' families
are on their way
to this hospital right now.
When they get here,
you will be responsible
for informing them
that their loved ones have died.
[ All murmuring ] What?
Why us?
Because
after what I've seen today,
you clearly need the practice.
Now, there are
four steps to this.
Location, language,
body language, and leave.
We think of them
as the four I's.
The first "I"... location.
Bring them to a quiet,
comfortable place
where they won't be disturbed.
Looking for the family
of nestor Rodriguez.
Family of Emma pritchett?
June napali?
That's me.
Uh, sir, can you come with me,
please?
Just a minute.
Okay, here, let me...
Get your damn hands off me.
I can do it.
Next, language.
We used all our capabilities.
Don't sugarcoat it.
Don't leave anything
open to interpretation.
Unfortunately, we were
unable to resuscitate him.
And despite our best efforts...
You have to use the word "died."
Franklin is no longer with us.
Grandpa left? Where'd he go?
What?
Can we go there?
Oh, I-I'm sorry.
That's not what I...
Are you going to
take us there now?
Uh...
Owen: Third, body language.
Often a comforting touch
can help.
A hand on the arm
or on the shoulder...
[ Sobbing ]
If it feels appropriate.
Grandpa's in heaven now,
sweetie, with your turtle.
Why are you still here?
And finally,
leave as soon as you're able.
You've done what you came to do,
so excuse yourself.
Get out.
You know what?
We're just gonna do this here.
[ Sighs ]
Hi.
Hey.
Hey, hey.
Abraham.
[ Sighs ]
Hey, who was monitoring
this man?
I checked him five minutes ago.
He was fine.
Oh, Abe.
I cannot fathom
what possessed you
to abandon your pa...
My patient.
- Dr. Shepherd...
- Why are you talking?
No one is talking to you.
You, speak.
I did not abandon her.
Dr. Wilson is an excellent...
I didn't choose wil...
I chose you.
I gave you
specific instructions.
I couldn't do it.
I'm sorry. I couldn't
put Rachel through that.
Okay, okay.
Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
Edwards, why?
There has to be
a good reason why,
because you are
too smart for this.
So, tell me.
Look...
When I was a kid,
I was in a clinical trial
for sickle cell anemia.
- What?
- I was 5.
They held me down,
the nurses and the doctors,
sticking me with needles
and taking my bone marrow.
You can't imagine the pain.
And my mom would be saying
over and over,
"honey, it's for your own good.
It's for your own good."
I screamed and I kicked
and I fought,
and so sometimes they would
strap me to the table,
which they were right to do.
For my own good.
I was 5.
I felt like I was being punished
for something that I didn't do,
for something that was
inside of me.
And I'm not gonna do that
to somebody else.
I'm sorry.
I can't. I won't.
Hey, hunt, um, I need to find
a patient... Gabby margraff.
Oh, she's in surgery
with grey and Pierce.
What do you need?
I need to tell her
her boyfriend's dead.
He coded in the hallway.
Well, how did he...
I mean, he's 90.
Could've been a stroke
or an m.I.
He just fell asleep and...
Robbins, I'm sorry.
We'll take care of it, okay?
Mm.
- Okay.
- Thanks.
¶ No matter how hard I try ¶
¶ you keep pushing me aside ¶
¶ and I can't break through ¶
¶ there's no talking to you ¶
¶ so sad that you're leaving ¶
¶ takes time to believe it ¶
[ Crying ]
¶ But after all
is said and done ¶
¶ you're gonna be
the lonely one ¶
¶ do you believe
in life after love? ¶
oh, god.
What happened?
Nothing.
Nothing. I'm fine.
What happened?
I don't know. I don't even know
why I'm crying.
He wasn't...
He wasn't even my patient.
He wasn't even a-a baby.
He was 90.
Who was 90?
Abe.
He was... In love.
He met the love of his life
when he was 85,
and he was gonna propose to her.
But he died.
Oh.
I'm sorry.
God, I felt like I could
talk to him forever.
He made me feel like...
You know,
I-i never really believed
that I'd find love again.
Not anything real or true.
I thought that I had it
and I screwed it up,
and that was over.
Then he was madly in love at 85,
and that is proof
that there is...
There is more love out there.
[ Laughs ]
Callie might've found hers
and I can find mine,
even if it's in 60 years.
[ Laughs ]
¶ But I know... ¶
[ voice breaking ] I don't
want to find a new soul mate
when I'm 90!
I met mine already
and he wants a divorce.
¶ I don't need you anymore ¶
aww, sweetie.
This is about me.
This isn't about you.
[ Cries ]
Sorry. ¶ 'Cause I know
that I am strong ¶
what the hell was that?
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean for you to get
thrown under the bus like that.
I don't care about that.
How could you
make up a story like that?
What?
Working the system is one thing.
You want to tell a little lie to
get your labs run faster, great.
I-I'm on board.
But that, what you did in there,
the violin you played for
Dr. Shepherd, you can't do that.
You can't manipulate someone
like that.
You crossed a line.
Don't you even have
a conscience?
¶ I can feel something
inside me say ¶
well, it worked, so maybe
I'm better off without one.
Hey.
I owe you an apology.
I...You were
helping out a friend.
I overreacted.
Don't worry about it.
If I'd known about Edwards,
I would've approached
the whole thing differently.
[ Sighs ] Um, we're...
We're having this thing
at the house tonight.
Um... You two should come.
Um, there's gonna be
food, booze.
She could probably use it.
Dr. Shepherd.
Yeah?
Stephanie's a liar.
She was never sick.
She made the whole thing up.
Check the drains for blood
every two hours
and page me when she's awake.
Okay.
I'm gonna go let Abe know.
Oh, okay. Oh, my god. He's here.
- What? Who?
- He's here.
He's here, and he's hot.
Oh, my god. Help me.
Save me. Help.
Hey, uh, Dr. Pierce?
Uh, what does he want?
What do you want?
Is that your patient,
Gabby margraff?
Why?
Why?
I'm supposed to notify her
that her husband's died.
[ Sighs ]
They... They were not married.
They were just shacking up.
Okay, but he...
He put her down as next of kin
on his forms, so...
W-why are you...
You are an intern.
Give me that.
Yeah, she's not your patient.
This isn't your job.
Who sent you up here?
Dr. Hunt ordered me.
It's a teaching thing.
- Um, I know the four I's.
- Oh, you know what?
Stop talking. Four I's?
She's not even your patient.
Don't touch her!
Don't go near her!
I'll deal with hunt!
Geez, what's her problem?
It's not like
I want to be doing this.
Her problem
is that there are rules
and... Boundaries.
And some people think that you
can just ignore all those rules,
that you can cross
those boundaries,
that just because protocol
is broken once in a whi...
No, no, no.
Once!
Once.
That the rules go out the
window, but they don't, okay?
Her problem is that
hot people should know
that just because a person does
something that is reckless
and likes it
does not mean
that they are going to
keep doing that thing, okay?
Her problem is that
maybe she is tired of
scrapbooking and glitter,
but she does not know
who she is anymore,
and everyone needs to just give
her the space to figure it out
and stop asking her questions
and talking about jumbo condoms.
That...
Is Meredith's problem.
Understand?
[ Clears throat ]
- Yeah, I think that...
- Okay, good.
Great.
Dr. Shepherd, I promise you...
I've heard enough.
Oh, uh, Dr. Shepherd.
Uh, grey tell you that I subbed
in for her class this morning?
And I think I did
the neuro department proud.
Dr. Webber,
as residency directory,
you should know...
Dr. Edwards abandoned
a patient this afternoon,
and when questioned about it,
she lied to my face.
A truly offensive lie
about being sick as a kid,
and I bought it.
I...
I believed you.
She told me...
Dr. Shepherd.
What do you want me to do here?
She doesn't believe me
on her own.
[ Sighs ]
When she applied
to this program,
I got a call from
Keith Wagner at Saint Jude's.
That sickle cell trial
was a milestone in his career.
Wanted to tell me
how proud he was of her
and how lucky we'd be
to have her.
Hers was one of the few
success stories
to come out of that trial.
I don't understand
why Wilson told me you lied.
Because Wilson doesn't know.
Because
I don't talk about it anymore
because
I'm not a patient anymore.
I am a surgeon.
And when I do talk about it,
I only tell people I can trust.
[ Door opens ]
Why didn't she just...
Why didn't she just tell me
to confirm the story with you?
Why did she let me... God.
[ Sighs ]
How many hours?
How many days?
How many surgeries
have you spent with Edwards?
She's been your right hand.
So why was it so easy
to question her integrity
based on the word of
a doctor you hardly knew?
[ Sighs ]
Oh.
God.
Okay.
Keep him in n.P.O... Hunt.
What the hell is going on?
- Sorry?
- I have an intern who says
you sent him upstairs
to tell my patient...
I did. I'm giving them a crash
course in breaking bad news.
- They need it.
- Oh, a crash course.
Is that how this goes?
No, it's not how this goes.
That is not how this works.
Grey,
this is a teaching hospital.
We teach from experience.
Now, I've given them
the four I's...
The four I's are not enough.
These interns,
they need a lot more.
Of course they need more.
That's why they have to do it.
They have to...
Experience it.
[ Sighs ] They have to live it.
And to learn it, they have to be
up close and personal with it.
Meredith:
When you walk into a room
to tell someone
that their loved one has died,
it's more than just a list of
bullet points you've memorized.
Yours is the face
they will remember
for the rest of their life.
They were fine
before they met you.
They picked up their children
from school,
they made dinner,
and they got a call.
The police showed up at
their door and brought them here
with those children to this room
so that you can give them the
worst news of their entire life.
You are changing
this person's life forever.
You are responsible
for this moment.
For the instant that person
goes from wife to widow is you.
All you. Nobody but you.
So, this person
isn't an inconvenience.
They are not a box on a list
to be checked off.
You are a part of their life
now.
Your words, your face.
So take that seriously
and recognize
the importance of your role.
And respect the fact
that that person's pain
is the biggest thing
in the room.
You got it?
[ All murmuring ]
It's not closed forever, right?
The orgasm train will
chug into the station again.
It just...
I'm just not wondering
what's out there.
Not feeling like
I'm missing anything.
I've had that
great, amazing love.
And that part's behind me now,
and I have the kids and you guys
and surgery, and...
I'm happy.
And I never thought
I would be again and I am.
And that's all I need.
¶¶
So, you just need to watch those
lines just like before.
Good, good.
Okay.
[ Rachel groans ]
Stephanie: There you go.
There you go.
Okay.
I know this sucks.
But we're gonna
get you in that chair, okay?
[ Groaning ]
Okay.
Go on. Keep hitting me.
Keep hitting me.
We're almost there.
Keep hitting me. Focus on that.
Focus on that.
You don't stop now until
we get you into this chair.
Come on.
You're almost there, Rachel.
Come on.
[ Groaning ]
Keep going.
I know. You're almost there.
You're almost there.
[ Groaning ]
Come on.
Come on, Rachel. Just one step.
There you go.
Okay. Good. Good.
Good job, Rachel. You did good.
[ Breathing heavily ]
It's okay. You're okay.
You're okay.
You did it.
I need to step out
for just a moment.
You did good.
[ Chuckles ]
You did it. Good job.
That was excellent.
You saw?
I did.
Very, very well done.
[ Sniffles, crying ]
¶ Remember those walls
I built? ¶
¶ baby, they're tumbling down ¶
I'm sorry...
That I didn't believe you.
I should have.
Thank you.
¶ It's like I've been awakened ¶
[ sighs ]
Wait, aren't you supposed to be
throwing a party right now?
¶ I ain't never gonna
shut you out ¶ oh.
Crap.
¶ Everywhere I'm looking now ¶
deluca.
Hey, look, I'm...
I'm sorry, okay?
I didn't mean to cross
boundaries or not do my job,
and I clearly pissed you off
and Dr. grey.
So I'm sorry, and if
it's about last night, I'm...
Shh!
Shush!
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
um...
Um, okay.
Actually, I was... I was
coming to apologize to you.
Uh... That yelling
was not about today.
It was about last night.
[ Chuckles ]
Yeah, I knew that.
Right, well, um...
Last night
is not going to happen again.
It was very nice.
Was better than nice.
But... I don't do this.
Hey, look, I don't... I don't
do this, either, okay?
I don't. But at the bar,
you were just so...
You were so... also.
And, uh... You're...
You're very...
Thank you. Uh, so are you.
So, uh, it was... It was a slip.
Right. I get it.
And, uh, you know what? I agree.
Okay, it... It never happened.
Deleted.
¶ I ain't never
gonna shut you out ¶
thank you.
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
[ Chuckles ]
Thank you.
¶ I can see your halo ¶
[ Both chuckle ]
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
Meredith: There are some things in
life that simply can't be avoided.
¶¶
¶ everywhere I'm looking now ¶ no
matter how uncomfortable they make us.
¶ I'm surrounded
by your embrace ¶
¶ baby, I can see your halo ¶
and there can be rewards in
stepping outside
of your comfort zone.
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
¶ I can see your halo ¶
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
¶ halo ¶
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
even when the thought of it
makes us want to puke.
No, those are for the guests.
Yeah, we came early
to eat the best part.
¶ By the look on your face... ¶
hey, where's Maggie?
She was supposed to be here
with the ice
and people
are already showing up.
Maggie got held up at work.
She said she's on her way.
Uh, the dryer finished
a little bit early,
but the tablecloth's still damp.
¶¶
It's fine.
Just put it on the table.
It's fine. Okay.
Even when we want nothing more
than to run screaming
for the hills.
[ Brakes squeal ]
Oh, is that Jackson?
No, it's Callie.
Oh, god.
I didn't know her new girlfriend
was a redhead.
Oh, no. I-i need more liquor.
I'm not ready.
¶ To get back in control
of your emotion ¶ whoa.
¶ You can make it through
tomorrow ¶ [ Doorbell rings ]
I'll get it.
¶ Set free your butterfly girl ¶
that's why people love to say that
what doesn't kill you
makes you stronger.
¶ And when you rise
above the sorrow ¶
welcome. [ Laughs ] Hi, Meredith.
This is penny.
¶ You'll be a butterfly girl ¶
Meredith: The call to not get
a head C.T. was a bad call.
I'm so sorry.
It was my job to save him
and I failed.
Honey, this is Meredith.
[ Speech distorted ]
But I brought some wine.
But sometimes...
Penny: I'm so sorry.
Those people don't know what
the hell they're talking about.
---
¶ How can I go? ¶
the human brain.
This is the reason
I asked Dr. grey
if I could fill in for her
this morning.
Nature makes a beautiful machine.
[ All murmuring ]
¶ Wake me up when the voices
die ¶ don't you think?
Meredith:
You might be surprised,
but anatomy classes can be
uncomfortable for surgeons.
Ready to take it apart?
We're trained to
put bodies back together.
We prefer our tissue
warm, alive.
See how easily
the blade slices through?
Comes apart like warm butter.
This big ball of jelly
is the essential element that makes you...
[ Stomach gurgles ]
You.
H-here's a fun fact.
If left to decompose,
the brain actually liquifies.
[ Gags ] Usually when a surgeon
is staring at dead tissue...
[ Laughter ] Look out!
Was it something I said?
[ Laughter ]
¶ We'll grow apart ¶ ...It means
that something is very, very wrong.
¶ Baby, let's blame the
planets ¶ [ Thudding ]
¶ Make a new start ¶ oh, god.
¶ Changing as if we meant it ¶
oh, god, please, please.
Please, please, please.
Oh, no, no.
- No!
- Whoa.
Hey.
Oh, we had sex?
We had sex.
Yeah, we had so much sex.
Yeah, we did. And it was great.
I don't mean to rush out,
but, uh...
There are
people in this house, and, um,
we had sex and you're an intern...
Yeah.
So you... You have to get out.
Yeah, okay. Bye.
Stop. You...
There might be people out there.
There might be kids.
¶ Running, running, running,
running behind, yeah ¶
you have kids?
My sister has kids.
My sister could see you.
I mean, I don't hear anyone.
I think we're okay.
¶ We'll grow apart ¶
are you sure?
¶ Baby, let's blame the planets ¶ yeah.
We're fine.
¶ Make a new start ¶
¶ changing as if we meant it ¶
well.
¶ Where can I leave my father's ride?
¶ good morning.
¶ Wake me up
when the voices die ¶
¶ do me like
you might know my mind ¶
¶ carry me to the other side ¶
¶ running, running, running,
running behind, yeah ¶
¶ I'm always really running
behind, yo ¶
¶ running, running, running,
running behind, yeah ¶
¶ I'm alwa... ¶
- hey.
- Good morning.
Amelia: You said you were drunk.
Can I at least ask
if you used a condom?
Shut... Up.
Look, there is a jumbo box of
condoms under the bathroom sink.
I share. They are for everyone.
Jumbo? Seriously?
I was being optimistic.
Wait.
That was you making
all that noise last night?
I thought that was Amelia.
Well, you aren't shy.
And you have a filthy mouth.
Okay, can we not
talk about this?
Please. I am begging you.
So, the intern was good in bed.
Intern? What intern?
Maggie, what intern?
Alex can hear us.
Alex doesn't care about this.
Do you care, Alex?
Do I care about any
of this conversation? No.
Did he visit ladytown?
Because I find if they don't
go down to ladytown
the first time,
there should be no next time.
- She's right about that.
- No more talking!
If either of you
says another word,
I will jump out of this car
while it is moving.
And ladytown
is just as bad as ladyplace.
- Geez. So sensitive.
- Just trying to be nice.
Take an interest. God.
Hey, what time do you want me
at your house tonight?
Why are you
coming to my house tonight?
You're having a dinner party.
Oh, the dinner party.
No, that's not tonight.
No, that's weeks away.
It's on the...
Dinner party's on the 14th,
Alex.
Today is the 14th.
You people need
adult supervision.
I don't think I'm gonna go to
this dinner thing tonight.
I think I'm gonna work.
Jo, they don't hate you.
They don't like me.
They're your friends.
They're my bosses.
It's like I'm on call
all the time.
They... they treat me
like a resident,
not like a person,
not like your girlfriend.
'Cause they only ever
see you here
'cause you never
go to their parties.
Go to the party.
I want them to know you.
It'll be fun, I promise.
Fun like a barium enema.
What?
Your boyfriend's little posse
controls this place.
Jo, you have an invite
to the inner circle.
You go to that party,
you make friends
with the chiefs of neuro,
cardio, and general,
you would be unstoppable.
Every surgery in this hospital
would be yours.
[ Chuckling ]
That... that dinner...
I'd kill for an invite.
You're a little bit scary
right now.
Edwards, my dear.
Let's roll.
Maybe I'll get an invite
after all.
First neuro, then the world.
He didn't mean it, right?
I mean, you don't just toss the
word "divorce" out there like that.
It was just
the heat of the moment, right?
Maybe he was just mad, or...
I'm the one who's mad.
"Divorce"? No.
I refuse to accept it. Refuse.
Do you think he's going to
that thing tonight?
[ Sighing ] Oh, god. Probably.
Are you going?
Please tell me you're going.
I don't know.
I mean, Callie's gonna be there.
Since when's that been an issue?
It's not. It's just...
I don't want to make her new
girlfriend feel uncomfortable.
You know, intimidated by me. Mm.
I mean,
if she's even bringing her.
I don't know
if she's bringing her. Do you?
Well, she's right over there.
Do you want me to ask her if
she's bringing her girlfriend?
Yes, please.
You ask about Jackson,
I'll ask about penny.
10-4.
Oh, hey, um,
about that thing tonight,
I'm not so sure
any of them cook.
Should I bring food just in case
so none of us starve?
You know,
I think it's gonna be fine.
Um, do you know if...
Do you know if
Jackson's coming tonight?
- Uh, no idea.
- Are you bringing penny?
Oh.
I hadn't...
Uh, I didn't know
if you'd be okay with that.
And, uh... yeah,
I didn't want it to be awkward
or uncomfortable for
her, you know. M...
Okay? Me?
Mm-hmm.
Oh, I'm fine.
Are you kidding?
No, bring her. Totally.
Bring her, 'cause,
I mean, I want to meet her.
I mean, I think that we all
want to meet her.
Yeah. I mean, not just me.
Mostly me 'cause I...
I know that I would really love
to meet her.
- Yeah.
- I mean...
Mm-hmm.
I will see if she's available.
Cool, cool.
- Mm-hmm.
- Yeah.
See? I can do this.
I can do this. I'm excited.
It's cool, I'm cool.
Yeah, cool people
don't say they're cool.
Hannah: Rachel bishop, 32,
post-op day one following
decompressive craniotomy.
Isn't able to respond verbally,
but is arousable
and following motor commands.
Excellent.
She is the perfect candidate
for early ambulation.
You want to get her on her feet?
She just had surgery yesterday.
That's exactly the point.
Uh, new studies are showing
that if we get neuro patients
up and moving
as soon as possible after
surgery, they recover faster.
They have a greater
return to function.
But the protocol is that we...
That is the great thing about
being head of the department.
I decide what is
and is not protocol.
Yes, ma'am.
Mm-hmm.
Uh... Call Rachel's mother and
suggest she not come in today.
It is gonna be a little rough.
Uh, Dr. Shepherd, sorry,
but Dr. Hunt said to round up
all available interns.
Why? What's going on?
We're about to get hit
with a silver flood.
I need fiber-optic intubation
on standby for each bed.
- What do we got?
- Silver flood.
Okay, I need vitamin k,
warm fluids,
blankets, and bair huggers.
Uh, what's a silver flood?
Callie: A silver flood
is a fracture feast.
I need slings, splints,
and pelvic binders,
as many as you can
get your hands on.
- Silver flood?
- Silver flood.
Oh, and page every
on-call X-ray tech.
Haven't seen one of these
since mercy west.
This will be fun.
Yes, but what is it exactly?
A silver flood is no
regular day in the pit.
Patients might be agitated,
angry, possibly even violent.
Use soothing tones,
but do not speak too softly.
Do not administer
unnecessary fluids.
If you see bruising,
think bleeding.
No narcotics, no benzos.
Any questions?
Uh, y-yes,
what is a silver flood?
¶¶
[ indistinct talking ]
Harold: I spent good money
on that damn cruise,
and the shuttle bus crashed
before we even reached the port.
Damn driver was fiddling with
his phone the entire damn way.
So, he was... He was texting?
Not on your life.
The way he was staring
at that thing,
it had to be porno.
Bailey: All right, call the O.R.
Tell them they need to have it
ready for me yesterday.
Go!
Oh, silver flood. [ Chuckles ]
Well, what did you think it was?
Why do you need a code word
for a bunch of old people?
What? We're not old people.
We're senior citizens.
Disrespectful.
Calling people old.
Who do you think you are?
I'm not old.
You don't know old.
You are rude.
That's why. Have fun with that.
I want to speak
to your supervisor.
[ Sighs ]
[ Siren wailing ]
Thiazide for the blood pressure,
metformin for my diabetes.
I also take another pill
for my arthritis.
- Great, so...
- I'm not done.
Also some kind of cholesterol
pill and a baby aspirin.
That's it.
[ Clears throat ]
Eddie, are you sure
you're not forgetting
some of the medications
you might've been on,
like, say for, pfft,
I don't know, uh,
erectile dysfunction?
Do I look like the kind of guy
who needs to pop a pill
to pop a Woody?
Well, you know,
I just got to ask.
'Cause if... if you were
on one of those meds
and you didn't tell us,
then that could have
a very bad reaction
based on any medications
we might give you.
You could have
a drop in blood pressure,
you could have a stroke,
you could have a heart attack.
You need proof?
Watch this.
- No! No, no, no!
- That's okay.
That's... Please don't do that.
Mrs. margraff, we are
going to take you up to C.T.
And have you checked out, okay?
I'm not a Mrs., dear.
The gentleman and I
are just shacking up.
Oh. [ Chuckles ]
H-how's my girl?
I'm fine, Abe.
Settle down.
Check his left hip.
He took a spill in February,
hasn't been the same since.
Hasn't slowed him down, though.
[ Laughs ]
[ Chuckles ]
Wait, look.
D-don't bother with me.
Just make sure
Gabby's all right.
These girls know
what they're doing.
I-I-I'm just banged up is all.
Okay, so tell the nurses
to monitor him
and keep him hydrated.
Abe, we are going to
take Gabby up
and get her checked out, okay?
Okay. I-I'll be right here,
gabs, okay?
Will... will you...
Will you bring her back here?
- Absolutely.
- Take a nap, you old bastard!
Rachel, we just need to get you
to the edge of the bed.
We get there, we can stop,
and I know it hurts, but
you got to keep your eyes open.
Brody, hold her lines steady.
Watch her I.V.
Come on. Just a little further.
[ Groaning ]
- Maybe we should stop?
- Not yet.
We don't stop until we get her
to the edge of the bed
or reach
her point of intolerance.
Point of intolerance?
How will we know?
[ Vomits ]
Uh, I think that's pretty clear.
Okay.
We're gonna let you relax now.
You did very, very well.
Let's get her cleaned up.
Stop.
I got it.
[ Rachel breathes heavily ]
[ Sighs ]
I'm gonna need you to
take the lead
on Rachel bishop's next session.
Me?
Yeah, I have a full board,
there's a silver flood,
and if we miss a session,
we have to stop the treatment.
Well, would that
really be so bad?
Do you have something
you need to say?
I...
Don't think I'm comfortable
with this course of treatment.
I see.
We are obviously
pushing her way past
what she can handle right now,
and I just feel...
Edwards.
This protocol
is extremely difficult.
It feels traumatic.
But you have to look at it
like surgery.
Surgery is traumatic.
It is so, so hard
on the human body.
But in most cases, it is
a patient's best chance to live,
to be normal again, to heal.
This is Rachel's chance to heal.
While she vomits.
Find me when you're done.
Woman over P.A.:
Portable X-ray tech to E.R.
Portable X-ray tech to E.R.
[ Sighs ]
Excuse me, sweetheart.
Oh. It's Dr. sweetheart.
But what can I do for you?
Well, my lady friend,
Gabby margraff,
they said they were
taking her for a p.T.
Or something or... Or a p.P.?
- A C.T.?
- That's the ticket.
Oh, boy. You know, I haven't
seen her since, but I-i...
And I-i-i-i-i don't want to be
a bother,
but nobody's said anything.
Okay, well, hold on. Let me see.
Um...
Oh, yeah.
Okay, so according to this,
she's still in C.T.
Okay.
Oh, okay, good, good.
Great. Is there anything else
I can do for you?
Y-you got jell-o here, right?
We do. Indeed.
Diaphragmatic contour
is abnormal on the left.
It could be a rupture.
Any abdominal strain
and she could pop her guts
right into her left lung.
I think there might be
a splenic hematoma also,
but I won't know
until I get in there.
Any way you can do it
without a scar?
[ Chuckles ]
We'll do the best we can, Gabby,
okay? You just sit tight.
[ Gasps ]
Are you okay?
Yeah.
What's the matter?
Um, no, I'm having flashbacks.
Um... Sex flashbacks.
Oh. Oh.
Hey, Wilson, would you
step outside, please?
¶ Now I'm not tryin'
to be rude ¶
¶ but hey, pretty girl, I'm feelin' you
¶ okay, you were saying about the sex?
Meredith.
There was so much sex.
Hot, hot sex.
Everything hurts.
My back, my hip,
the top of my head.
I feel like I'm 80.
Oh, my god. He's an intern.
Who does that?
Who screws the interns?
What kind of person does that?
[ Laughs ]
The father of my children.
¶ Hot and fresh out the
kitchen ¶ oh, Meredith.
Okay, I didn't mean... you know
I didn't mean... I'm very sorry.
It's fine. Just relax.
You think
you're the first person
to have inappropriate work sex?
We all do it
all over the hospital.
I mean, we even
did it in here once.
¶ Bounce, bounce, bounce,
bounce, bounce ¶
you know,
I haven't thought about it.
Sex. ¶ Now it's like
murder she wrote ¶
I haven't thought about it
at all since...
That last morning...
The morning of the day he died.
¶ No more hoping and wishing, I'm 'bout to
take my key ¶ [ Sighs ] Mags, I'm a widow.
Meredith, I'm so sorry.
We don't have to
talk about this.
I'm... I can't believe
I even opened my stupid mouth.
Do you want me to get Alex
or something?
- I'm so sorry.
- No, no.
It's... it's... I'm a widow.
I mean, like in the books
and the movies.
You don't think that
that happens, but it does.
It's just...
I'm closed for business.
Vagina city's a ghost town.
Orgasm train doesn't
roll through here anymore.
¶ Cristal popping in the stretch navigator
¶ that part of my life is over.
You know, eventually, you'll...
When you're ready...
No. I don't want to.
It's fine.
I'm okay. I'm good.
So, tell me about the hot,
hot sex with the hot intern
and how he did you sideways
because I am widow grey,
dead inside.
[ Laughs ]
Honey, no.
That is the saddest story
I've ever heard.
Gabby.
Honey, you're breaking my heart.
The orgasm train
should never stop running.
I've had an orgasm every day
since I was 15.
Well, when I was 15,
I was scrapbooking with my mom.
We had nine different kinds
of glitter.
Now, see, that is hot to me.
Orgasms are wonderful.
I had two this morning
before we got on the bus.
¶ It's the freakin' weekend ¶
[ Chuckles ]
[ Flatline ]
- How long has he been down?
- 10 minutes.
I ran through
the acls v-fib protocol twice.
Okay, charge to 200.
What happened?
He was having chest pains,
so I gave him some nitro.
His b.P. Bottomed out
all at once.
I'm worried he was on e.D. Meds.
We asked him.
Well, was he? Clear!
- What happened?
- He insisted he wasn't.
We asked him several times.
We told him what could happen.
- Clear!
- He probably lied.
Why would he do that
when we told him?
People can be stubborn,
even when it's
the worst thing for them.
- We told him.
- Time of death 12:19.
What do...
What do we do now?
You notify the morgue.
- That's it?
- That's it.
[ Woman speaks indistinctly
over P.A. system ]
Excuse me. Can you help me?
They said my father
was in the accident.
Can you tell me
where I can find him?
What's his name?
Edward squire. Eddie.
He only answers to Eddie.
Uh... Okay.
I...I should, uh...
You know, I'm gonna...
Let's find someone
who can talk to you...
What? Why?
Is he hurt?
He, um... I'm really sorry,
but I don't think I should be...
Just tell me.
He h-had a heart attack.
Oh.
Is he... is he all right?
Can you take me to him?
I-I can't. I can't.
What do you mean you can't?
Just tell me where he is.
Your father's... He...
He passed away.
What?
We think he lied about
the medication he was taking.
What are you talking about?
He's dead?
- My father is dead?
- Please just come with me.
And we can find someone who
can... don't you touch me!
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
Sir, sir.
He said my father was dead, and
he won't tell me where he is!
I am so sorry.
He said my dad was a liar.
Sir, come sit down.
I'm gonna tell you
everything that happened
and I will take you to your dad,
okay?
Okay. Please, please.
Get him a chair and bring
him some water. Right.
[ Crying ]
Thank you. That was...
What did you do?
What did you say to him?
- Dr. Hunt, I...
- What the hell did you say?!
I thought the point of
a singles cruise
was to meet other singles.
Exactly.
Where do you think I met Gabby?
Five years ago
almost to the day.
- Really?
- Mm.
Absotively.
[ Chuckles ]
I didn't even want to go.
But my sister
wouldn't get off my back.
"Go out, meet people.
Don't just sit at home
in that chair."
Mm-hmm. It's a nice chair?
The best.
Oh, you press a button
and your feet go up.
And there's a...
There's a warmer in the seat.
And... and... and a little cubby
for the remote.
[ Gasps ] Sounds like a dream.
Now I'm living a new dream.
I got the chair. I got the girl.
Here, but let me
show you something.
Oh, Abe, this is all too sudden.
I barely know you.
I just met you.
[ Chuckles ]
You know, you're a wise ass.
[ Laughs ]
But I... but I like that.
Mm.
It's beautiful.
Gabby's beautiful.
I was gonna propose on the boat.
On the third night,
there's this big dance
in the main dining room.
Huge ice sculptures
and a dance band and everything.
That's where I first saw her.
Whoa.
The dress she was wearing.
[ Chuckles ]
I got so dizzy,
I-i just had to sit down.
I closed my eyes for a second,
and when I opened them...
[ pager beeping ]
Oh, gosh dang it.
Abe, I'm so sorry. Duty calls.
Oh, you kidding? Go.
You got
more important things to do
than to listen to my stories.
I am getting
the rest of that story.
I will be back a.S.A.P.
Bring another jell-o with you.
Oh, okay. Um, wait, hold on.
Raspberry or lime?
Surprise me.
Okay.
Okay, Gabby, we're going to
put you under now, okay?
- I need to tell Abe.
- Abe is downstairs.
We're gonna tell him
everything that's going on.
No, I need to tell him.
He'll crap his pants
if he thinks I'm in trouble.
I can grab an intern to...
Bless his heart, he may
actually crap his pants.
He's 90.
[ Monitor beeping ]
Okay, the sats are down to 87.
Gabby, I'm gonna need you to
take some deep breaths.
Let's get her under right now.
Wilson, go down
and find someone to tell Abe
that Gabby's in surgery
and she is just fine.
I was gonna scrub in.
Wilson,
we have enough hands here.
Go cover the pit.
You'll see him when you wake up.
Listen, Rachel,
I know this is hard,
but this is
how you're gonna heal.
Okay?
Here we go.
[ Grunts ]
All right, let's try for a step,
Rachel.
Can you give me a step?
- One step.
- [ Groans ]
You give me a step, you get in
that chair, we can stop.
Step, the chair, we stop.
- Aah!
- It's okay.
Come on. We got you.
You can do it. It's okay.
Come on. Step, chair, stop.
It's okay.
I got you.
Step, chair, stop.
That's enough.
That's enough for now.
Put her down.
Dr. Edwards?
That's okay.
That's good, Rachel.
That's really good.
Let's get you back to bed.
Let's get her in bed.
We haven't reached
her point of intolerance.
Dr. shep... i said we're done.
Okay.
Legs.
You did so good.
You did really good.
Really good, okay?
Want to go
grab some food with me?
I have no appetite.
Shepherd's making me
torture a patient
who just had brain surgery.
Because she likes you.
Got a funny way of showing it.
At least she let's you
torture a patient.
Grey and Pierce
just threw me out of the O.R.
They hate me.
You know,
I need to be more like you.
You make the system your bitch.
If I could get an attending
to look at me
the way that Shepherd
looks at you...
Okay, Rachel, Dr. Edwards said
that we just need to
get you into this chair,
so that's what we're gonna do.
All right.
Okay. Ready?
[ Rachel moaning ]
Wilson?
A word, please?
I'll be back.
Dr. Shepherd,
I was just
about to get Rachel on her feet.
Where the hell is Edwards?
Owen: There were 40 passengers
on the bus.
Eight of them died en route.
We've lost six in the E.R.
already,
and many more are in surgery
or in critical care
in the I.C.U.
All of these peoples' families
are on their way
to this hospital right now.
When they get here,
you will be responsible
for informing them
that their loved ones have died.
[ All murmuring ] What?
Why us?
Because
after what I've seen today,
you clearly need the practice.
Now, there are
four steps to this.
Location, language,
body language, and leave.
We think of them
as the four I's.
The first "I"... location.
Bring them to a quiet,
comfortable place
where they won't be disturbed.
Looking for the family
of nestor Rodriguez.
Family of Emma pritchett?
June napali?
That's me.
Uh, sir, can you come with me,
please?
Just a minute.
Okay, here, let me...
Get your damn hands off me.
I can do it.
Next, language.
We used all our capabilities.
Don't sugarcoat it.
Don't leave anything
open to interpretation.
Unfortunately, we were
unable to resuscitate him.
And despite our best efforts...
You have to use the word "died."
Franklin is no longer with us.
Grandpa left? Where'd he go?
What?
Can we go there?
Oh, I-I'm sorry.
That's not what I...
Are you going to
take us there now?
Uh...
Owen: Third, body language.
Often a comforting touch
can help.
A hand on the arm
or on the shoulder...
[ Sobbing ]
If it feels appropriate.
Grandpa's in heaven now,
sweetie, with your turtle.
Why are you still here?
And finally,
leave as soon as you're able.
You've done what you came to do,
so excuse yourself.
Get out.
You know what?
We're just gonna do this here.
[ Sighs ]
Hi.
Hey.
Hey, hey.
Abraham.
[ Sighs ]
Hey, who was monitoring
this man?
I checked him five minutes ago.
He was fine.
Oh, Abe.
I cannot fathom
what possessed you
to abandon your pa...
My patient.
- Dr. Shepherd...
- Why are you talking?
No one is talking to you.
You, speak.
I did not abandon her.
Dr. Wilson is an excellent...
I didn't choose wil...
I chose you.
I gave you
specific instructions.
I couldn't do it.
I'm sorry. I couldn't
put Rachel through that.
Okay, okay.
Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
Edwards, why?
There has to be
a good reason why,
because you are
too smart for this.
So, tell me.
Look...
When I was a kid,
I was in a clinical trial
for sickle cell anemia.
- What?
- I was 5.
They held me down,
the nurses and the doctors,
sticking me with needles
and taking my bone marrow.
You can't imagine the pain.
And my mom would be saying
over and over,
"honey, it's for your own good.
It's for your own good."
I screamed and I kicked
and I fought,
and so sometimes they would
strap me to the table,
which they were right to do.
For my own good.
I was 5.
I felt like I was being punished
for something that I didn't do,
for something that was
inside of me.
And I'm not gonna do that
to somebody else.
I'm sorry.
I can't. I won't.
Hey, hunt, um, I need to find
a patient... Gabby margraff.
Oh, she's in surgery
with grey and Pierce.
What do you need?
I need to tell her
her boyfriend's dead.
He coded in the hallway.
Well, how did he...
I mean, he's 90.
Could've been a stroke
or an m.I.
He just fell asleep and...
Robbins, I'm sorry.
We'll take care of it, okay?
Mm.
- Okay.
- Thanks.
¶ No matter how hard I try ¶
¶ you keep pushing me aside ¶
¶ and I can't break through ¶
¶ there's no talking to you ¶
¶ so sad that you're leaving ¶
¶ takes time to believe it ¶
[ Crying ]
¶ But after all
is said and done ¶
¶ you're gonna be
the lonely one ¶
¶ do you believe
in life after love? ¶
oh, god.
What happened?
Nothing.
Nothing. I'm fine.
What happened?
I don't know. I don't even know
why I'm crying.
He wasn't...
He wasn't even my patient.
He wasn't even a-a baby.
He was 90.
Who was 90?
Abe.
He was... In love.
He met the love of his life
when he was 85,
and he was gonna propose to her.
But he died.
Oh.
I'm sorry.
God, I felt like I could
talk to him forever.
He made me feel like...
You know,
I-i never really believed
that I'd find love again.
Not anything real or true.
I thought that I had it
and I screwed it up,
and that was over.
Then he was madly in love at 85,
and that is proof
that there is...
There is more love out there.
[ Laughs ]
Callie might've found hers
and I can find mine,
even if it's in 60 years.
[ Laughs ]
¶ But I know... ¶
[ voice breaking ] I don't
want to find a new soul mate
when I'm 90!
I met mine already
and he wants a divorce.
¶ I don't need you anymore ¶
aww, sweetie.
This is about me.
This isn't about you.
[ Cries ]
Sorry. ¶ 'Cause I know
that I am strong ¶
what the hell was that?
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean for you to get
thrown under the bus like that.
I don't care about that.
How could you
make up a story like that?
What?
Working the system is one thing.
You want to tell a little lie to
get your labs run faster, great.
I-I'm on board.
But that, what you did in there,
the violin you played for
Dr. Shepherd, you can't do that.
You can't manipulate someone
like that.
You crossed a line.
Don't you even have
a conscience?
¶ I can feel something
inside me say ¶
well, it worked, so maybe
I'm better off without one.
Hey.
I owe you an apology.
I...You were
helping out a friend.
I overreacted.
Don't worry about it.
If I'd known about Edwards,
I would've approached
the whole thing differently.
[ Sighs ] Um, we're...
We're having this thing
at the house tonight.
Um... You two should come.
Um, there's gonna be
food, booze.
She could probably use it.
Dr. Shepherd.
Yeah?
Stephanie's a liar.
She was never sick.
She made the whole thing up.
Check the drains for blood
every two hours
and page me when she's awake.
Okay.
I'm gonna go let Abe know.
Oh, okay. Oh, my god. He's here.
- What? Who?
- He's here.
He's here, and he's hot.
Oh, my god. Help me.
Save me. Help.
Hey, uh, Dr. Pierce?
Uh, what does he want?
What do you want?
Is that your patient,
Gabby margraff?
Why?
Why?
I'm supposed to notify her
that her husband's died.
[ Sighs ]
They... They were not married.
They were just shacking up.
Okay, but he...
He put her down as next of kin
on his forms, so...
W-why are you...
You are an intern.
Give me that.
Yeah, she's not your patient.
This isn't your job.
Who sent you up here?
Dr. Hunt ordered me.
It's a teaching thing.
- Um, I know the four I's.
- Oh, you know what?
Stop talking. Four I's?
She's not even your patient.
Don't touch her!
Don't go near her!
I'll deal with hunt!
Geez, what's her problem?
It's not like
I want to be doing this.
Her problem
is that there are rules
and... Boundaries.
And some people think that you
can just ignore all those rules,
that you can cross
those boundaries,
that just because protocol
is broken once in a whi...
No, no, no.
Once!
Once.
That the rules go out the
window, but they don't, okay?
Her problem is that
hot people should know
that just because a person does
something that is reckless
and likes it
does not mean
that they are going to
keep doing that thing, okay?
Her problem is that
maybe she is tired of
scrapbooking and glitter,
but she does not know
who she is anymore,
and everyone needs to just give
her the space to figure it out
and stop asking her questions
and talking about jumbo condoms.
That...
Is Meredith's problem.
Understand?
[ Clears throat ]
- Yeah, I think that...
- Okay, good.
Great.
Dr. Shepherd, I promise you...
I've heard enough.
Oh, uh, Dr. Shepherd.
Uh, grey tell you that I subbed
in for her class this morning?
And I think I did
the neuro department proud.
Dr. Webber,
as residency directory,
you should know...
Dr. Edwards abandoned
a patient this afternoon,
and when questioned about it,
she lied to my face.
A truly offensive lie
about being sick as a kid,
and I bought it.
I...
I believed you.
She told me...
Dr. Shepherd.
What do you want me to do here?
She doesn't believe me
on her own.
[ Sighs ]
When she applied
to this program,
I got a call from
Keith Wagner at Saint Jude's.
That sickle cell trial
was a milestone in his career.
Wanted to tell me
how proud he was of her
and how lucky we'd be
to have her.
Hers was one of the few
success stories
to come out of that trial.
I don't understand
why Wilson told me you lied.
Because Wilson doesn't know.
Because
I don't talk about it anymore
because
I'm not a patient anymore.
I am a surgeon.
And when I do talk about it,
I only tell people I can trust.
[ Door opens ]
Why didn't she just...
Why didn't she just tell me
to confirm the story with you?
Why did she let me... God.
[ Sighs ]
How many hours?
How many days?
How many surgeries
have you spent with Edwards?
She's been your right hand.
So why was it so easy
to question her integrity
based on the word of
a doctor you hardly knew?
[ Sighs ]
Oh.
God.
Okay.
Keep him in n.P.O... Hunt.
What the hell is going on?
- Sorry?
- I have an intern who says
you sent him upstairs
to tell my patient...
I did. I'm giving them a crash
course in breaking bad news.
- They need it.
- Oh, a crash course.
Is that how this goes?
No, it's not how this goes.
That is not how this works.
Grey,
this is a teaching hospital.
We teach from experience.
Now, I've given them
the four I's...
The four I's are not enough.
These interns,
they need a lot more.
Of course they need more.
That's why they have to do it.
They have to...
Experience it.
[ Sighs ] They have to live it.
And to learn it, they have to be
up close and personal with it.
Meredith:
When you walk into a room
to tell someone
that their loved one has died,
it's more than just a list of
bullet points you've memorized.
Yours is the face
they will remember
for the rest of their life.
They were fine
before they met you.
They picked up their children
from school,
they made dinner,
and they got a call.
The police showed up at
their door and brought them here
with those children to this room
so that you can give them the
worst news of their entire life.
You are changing
this person's life forever.
You are responsible
for this moment.
For the instant that person
goes from wife to widow is you.
All you. Nobody but you.
So, this person
isn't an inconvenience.
They are not a box on a list
to be checked off.
You are a part of their life
now.
Your words, your face.
So take that seriously
and recognize
the importance of your role.
And respect the fact
that that person's pain
is the biggest thing
in the room.
You got it?
[ All murmuring ]
It's not closed forever, right?
The orgasm train will
chug into the station again.
It just...
I'm just not wondering
what's out there.
Not feeling like
I'm missing anything.
I've had that
great, amazing love.
And that part's behind me now,
and I have the kids and you guys
and surgery, and...
I'm happy.
And I never thought
I would be again and I am.
And that's all I need.
¶¶
So, you just need to watch those
lines just like before.
Good, good.
Okay.
[ Rachel groans ]
Stephanie: There you go.
There you go.
Okay.
I know this sucks.
But we're gonna
get you in that chair, okay?
[ Groaning ]
Okay.
Go on. Keep hitting me.
Keep hitting me.
We're almost there.
Keep hitting me. Focus on that.
Focus on that.
You don't stop now until
we get you into this chair.
Come on.
You're almost there, Rachel.
Come on.
[ Groaning ]
Keep going.
I know. You're almost there.
You're almost there.
[ Groaning ]
Come on.
Come on, Rachel. Just one step.
There you go.
Okay. Good. Good.
Good job, Rachel. You did good.
[ Breathing heavily ]
It's okay. You're okay.
You're okay.
You did it.
I need to step out
for just a moment.
You did good.
[ Chuckles ]
You did it. Good job.
That was excellent.
You saw?
I did.
Very, very well done.
[ Sniffles, crying ]
¶ Remember those walls
I built? ¶
¶ baby, they're tumbling down ¶
I'm sorry...
That I didn't believe you.
I should have.
Thank you.
¶ It's like I've been awakened ¶
[ sighs ]
Wait, aren't you supposed to be
throwing a party right now?
¶ I ain't never gonna
shut you out ¶ oh.
Crap.
¶ Everywhere I'm looking now ¶
deluca.
Hey, look, I'm...
I'm sorry, okay?
I didn't mean to cross
boundaries or not do my job,
and I clearly pissed you off
and Dr. grey.
So I'm sorry, and if
it's about last night, I'm...
Shh!
Shush!
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
um...
Um, okay.
Actually, I was... I was
coming to apologize to you.
Uh... That yelling
was not about today.
It was about last night.
[ Chuckles ]
Yeah, I knew that.
Right, well, um...
Last night
is not going to happen again.
It was very nice.
Was better than nice.
But... I don't do this.
Hey, look, I don't... I don't
do this, either, okay?
I don't. But at the bar,
you were just so...
You were so... also.
And, uh... You're...
You're very...
Thank you. Uh, so are you.
So, uh, it was... It was a slip.
Right. I get it.
And, uh, you know what? I agree.
Okay, it... It never happened.
Deleted.
¶ I ain't never
gonna shut you out ¶
thank you.
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
[ Chuckles ]
Thank you.
¶ I can see your halo ¶
[ Both chuckle ]
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
Meredith: There are some things in
life that simply can't be avoided.
¶¶
¶ everywhere I'm looking now ¶ no
matter how uncomfortable they make us.
¶ I'm surrounded
by your embrace ¶
¶ baby, I can see your halo ¶
and there can be rewards in
stepping outside
of your comfort zone.
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
¶ I can see your halo ¶
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
¶ halo ¶
¶ I can feel your halo ¶
even when the thought of it
makes us want to puke.
No, those are for the guests.
Yeah, we came early
to eat the best part.
¶ By the look on your face... ¶
hey, where's Maggie?
She was supposed to be here
with the ice
and people
are already showing up.
Maggie got held up at work.
She said she's on her way.
Uh, the dryer finished
a little bit early,
but the tablecloth's still damp.
¶¶
It's fine.
Just put it on the table.
It's fine. Okay.
Even when we want nothing more
than to run screaming
for the hills.
[ Brakes squeal ]
Oh, is that Jackson?
No, it's Callie.
Oh, god.
I didn't know her new girlfriend
was a redhead.
Oh, no. I-i need more liquor.
I'm not ready.
¶ To get back in control
of your emotion ¶ whoa.
¶ You can make it through
tomorrow ¶ [ Doorbell rings ]
I'll get it.
¶ Set free your butterfly girl ¶
that's why people love to say that
what doesn't kill you
makes you stronger.
¶ And when you rise
above the sorrow ¶
welcome. [ Laughs ] Hi, Meredith.
This is penny.
¶ You'll be a butterfly girl ¶
Meredith: The call to not get
a head C.T. was a bad call.
I'm so sorry.
It was my job to save him
and I failed.
Honey, this is Meredith.
[ Speech distorted ]
But I brought some wine.
But sometimes...
Penny: I'm so sorry.
Those people don't know what
the hell they're talking about.