Grey's Anatomy (2005–…): Season 14, Episode 20 - Judgment Day - full transcript

After a doctor accidentally brings in "weed" cookies, the hospital turns upside down

Adrenaline
is the body's response

to stressful situations.

Hey. Wait, wai... wait.

I proofread the presentation,
tested the A/V equipment.

David Bowie is performance-ready.

Excellent.

Where are you going?

I'm going to check on my post-ops.

- I'll be back soon.
- What?

Try to calm down.
You're gonna stress out Bowie.

♪ You live your life out loud ♪



♪ I can see you got the fever ♪

It's one of many biochemical
compounds our bodies produce

- that alter our state of consciousness.
- Hey.

How long is this gonna take?

Well, it's gonna take
as long as it's gonna take.

- ♪ Get up, if ♪
- We have 25 proposals.

- ♪y'all are just sitting around ♪
- This eliminates the need for a port.

- That allows us to... No. No.
- Hey.

- Go away.
- Why?

I already lost sleep because
of you last night.

- Did you? Uh-huh.
- I'm trying to focus.

- I'm trying to win.
- Yeah? Good luck with that.

Oxytocin makes us feel
bonded with others.

I'm going backstage.



Kepner said I could be
the first to present.

Then I'll head
to Ollie's funeral.

Oh, I wish
I could come with you.

It'll be all right.

♪ Oh, oh, oh ♪

Dopamine makes us
more alert

and motivates us
to seek reward.

Baby. Move this box down there.

Mom, if you wanted input,
you could have done that

last week instead of
being

- in Boston.
- I was busy taking care of business.

So was Dr. Velez.

She had emergency surgery
in I.A.

She still managed
to get her notes in on time.

- Over there.
- Thank you.

That's nasty.

- Hi. Cookie?
- Oh God.

Whoa. Seriously?

- My girlfriend just got deported.
- Here.

A lack of serotonin
has been linked to depression.

You had time to make cookies?

They are lesbian gratitude cookies.

- What?
- Hm. Yeah.

I mean, that's what
they call them.

Remember my patients
who had the cancer

that turned out
not to be cancer?

Mmm. Lesbian gratitude cookies
are delicious.

I think I can say that,
but I'm not so sure about you.

- Hi. Cookie?
- Hi.

Um, one of my patients
just went into labor.

If I don't make it back,
you got this. You're magic.

GABA, an amino-acid
neurotransmitter,

helps reduce anxiety...

Ooh. Cookie?

- 'Cause I'm good to know
- Don't mind if I do.

Hmm.

Yeah, yeah

Come along with me money

'Cause you don't want
to miss the show

And endorphins create

a heightened state of happiness.

What?
What are you doing here?

You're supposed to be rounding.

The future of medicine is
in this room.

And that's why the grownups
get first dibs on the seats.

Here. Come on, let's go.
I'm going, too.

- Hey, cookie?
- Um, no, I can't eat when I'm nervous.

- I'll throw up, but thank you.
- Hm.

Like the kind we feel
when we win.

Morning and welcome

to Grey Sloan Surgical
Innovation Prototypes Day.

Today, we will see presentations
of the 25 proposals

that were chosen
in round one.

Five will be selected to move on
to the contest's final phase

and receive a $1 million grant

to further their
groundbreaking research.

Good luck to all of
today's presenters.

And we will begin
with Dr. Richard Webber.

You're on deck.

Hey. Want some cookies?

Sure. Thanks.

Thank you.

Let's begin.

Now, once we identify the cancer,

we do everything

we can...
\You knew we had to present today.

We had
a very clear deadline.

Yeah, well, cleaning up
the mess you made

has no clear end at all.

What mess?
What are you talking about?

The mess you made when you
decided to waive

Rebecca Froy's settlement
against your grandfather,

thereby allowing her
to speak publicly about it,

which sent our foundation's
board of directors

into a massive soaking
of their collective britches,

which I had to sop up.
That mess.

What settlement are you
talking about?

Sexual harassment.

To revolutionize the way that...

Close your mouth
before you catch a fly.

Dr. Orr!

We'll talk later.

Dr. Orr
so nice to see you, darling.

So, when you apply
the Path Pen to tissue,

it rapidly identifies

whether a cell is healthy...

or cancerous.

So you're showing us a mock-up?

No, no. It's functional.

I mean, it's still in the testing stage,

but, at this point,

approximately 80%
of all tumor types we sampled

are in the database,

and we hope for 100%
in the next few months.

- Wow. That is impressive.
- The Pen uses a...

Impressive? It's like
a drug-sniffing dog for cancer.

- We're screwed.
- Shh! Our idea's good, too.

Mass spectrometer,

which compares biomarkers
from the tissue

with those of the cancer cells
in the database.

The device...

Hey, Peggy, Dayna.

What's going on? Are you okay?
Is... Is the baby okay?

No, no, no, we're fine. Rose is fine.

It's the cookies.

I'm sorry?
You paged me 911.

- We're so sorry.
- We need the cookies back.

- We're so sorry.
- It was an accident.

Do you still have them?
Please say that you still have them.

The cookies? All of the cookies?

All the cookies,
all of the cookies.

Current procedures use
a portion of the small intestine

but the result can still have
some practical limitations,

due to its ability to secrete fluid...

peritoneal tissue is a good choice

- for vaginal reconstruction...
- Hi. Um.

- Now let's look at slides.
- Could you, um...

do you see that cookie tin up there?

C-Could you go get
those cookies for me?

I'm a little, uh,
wobbly. I can't.

I'm not going up there.

Go eat the cafeteria cookies

from the green room.

Okay.

Come here.

My patient accidentally
used peanut-butter cannabis

that her wife had got her when
she was going through chemo.

One thing led to another,
and, um, I seem to have given

a lot of people weed cookies,

um, with an unknown
and immeasurable amount

of weed in them.

The peritoneum naturally
regenerates within days.

She came to us with the idea...

Who had the cookies?

Who didn't?

And that's when I told them,
uh, you know,

I said, "Hey. We can make
a better vagina, you know?"

I'm gonna go back.

That sounds, uh...
That sounds wrong.

Vaginas are terrific
the way they are, honestly.

I love 'em, you know.

Um, I came from one, so...

This one, hers, actually.
Hey, Ma.

That's not what the script says.

What do we do?
What do we do?

What?

Oh, my God.

This one.

This is bad.

*GREY'S ANATOMY
Season 14 Episode 20

*GREY'S ANATOMY
Episode Title : "Judgement Day"

Due to unforeseen circumstances,
we are postponing

the remainder of
today's presentation.

Please raise your hand

if you ate any cookies from this tin.

Oh.

Unfortunately, the cookies in this tin

were tainted with rat poison.

So we need to treat those of you
who have ingested them

as soon as possible, please.

Okay. False alarm.

The cookies had marijuana
in them.

What?!

Yes. I didn't want to scare you.

So you went with rat poison?

You scared me to death.

- What?
- You knew they had weed in them.

Right. Yeah. I-I forgot.

Okay, so listen.

No one goes anywhere
until you're sober.

Ingesting marijuana
has a much stronger effect,

and it lasts much longer
than when you smoke it, so...

True story. We get kids
in the ER all the time...

They had... had...
They like the cookies

and the brownies and the candies.

They should really label
that stuff better.

So everyone stays here.

There's no medicine, no surgery,
and no patient interaction.

Yeah, I... Yeah, I'm just
gonna send

- some orders.
- No, you're not gonna send anything!

- Give your note to Jo.
- Wait. You're taking our phones?

Everyone,
give your phones to Wilson.

She will handle your patients,
your post-ops, and your charts.

So you're gonna do
all of our work?

- Yes, she's gonna reassess
- Yeah.

- And rearrange. It's gonna be great.
- Yeah.

You're so pretty.
You look like a cartoon.

- Okay, okay.
- You should look into it.

- Phones now.
- Jackson.

Everybody stay

- here.
- Right.

- Let's go.
- Oh, my God.

Andrew?

Andrew, you in there?

- Andrew?
- Who are we talking about?

Hey, Andrew?

Pierce? Oh, God, Pi...
Andrew. Pi... Pierce!

Pierce? Hey, Pierce.
Stop. Stop!

- Hey.
- They called.

They called, and they said
that he's coming today.

- I'm not ready.
- Wait.

Wait up. Who called?

DSHS.
They're bringing me a foster kid.

- Today?
- Yeah.

I just had the home inspection,

and they said, "We'll call you."

I didn't think
it would be this soon,

and now they're bringing me
a baby boy.

I said I could take ages zero to 17,

and they're bringing me zero.

Well, that's amazing, right?

I just got off a 36-hour shift,

and I came home to sleep,
and I... I don't have anything.

You're gonna be fine.

Do you need me
to come over and help?

No, no. No, no, no, no.

It's... Th-This is
what I wanted, and...

How soon can you get here?

- I'll be right over.
- Dr. Schwartz to the ER.

Hey. Hi. Have you seen Pierce?

No. What's with him?

A patient brought in
accidental weed cookies.

And he ate a lot of them.

And Pierce ate one, too.

Oh, my God. Yeah,
I will help you look.

Let me, uh,
call Owen and let him know

I will be there as soon as I can.

Is Owen okay?

Yeah. He, uh... He's getting
a foster kid today.

Pierce. Pierce.
Hey. Stop.

I... You...
You go. I got this.

- You got this.
- Stop! Let's go.

Oh, come along. Hey, we got to go.

Come on.

Come on. Got to go.

Hey, come on.

Hey, Pierce!

You're supposed to be
in the theater.

I ate marijuana.

I know.

I never had marijuana before.

Oh, that's... Really?

I've been drunk before,
and... I-I make poor choices.

Really embarrassing choices
when I'm drunk.

- So I just need to be alone.
- No. No, no, no, no.

You have never been high before.

You need to be with people who...

who can help you
and keep you safe.

I don't...

I don't think
I need my neck anymore.

Okay, just... Here. Come here.

Just go in here.

Oh, my God.

Can you come on?

Dr. Edell to the NICU.
Dr. Edell to the NICU.

- Alex?
- I figured out how to make

the ultrasound work.

It needs more water.
A waterfall.

Uh, hold up, Dr. Frankenstein.

Did you eat cookies this morning?

Oh, yeah. It was so good.
Are there more cookies?

Or, uh, chips?

- Okay.
- You got chips?

You're just coming with me.

Okay, but
why didn't you say anything?

Mnh. Turns out there's
no good time to tell your son

that his grandfather
is a sexual predator.

He isn't.
He was.

So... So the accusations are
accurate from Rebecca Frog?

Uh, Frond?

- Froy, Froy.
- Froy.

No, that's not right. It was like a...

Rebecca Froy's story was true.

All the stories were true.

Wait. What do you mean "all"?

You said "all."
"All the stories"? What's that?

There was many stories...
some ugly, some very ugly.

How many?
How many stories?

- 13. 13 women... all under NDAs...
- 13?

All secret!

Shh!

This is bad. This is so bad.

This is indispensable...
fensible... indefensible.

- What are you looking for?
- My glasses!

Oh.

13, Mom?

13.

Some attendings

have unexpectedly
become... unavailable.

You will be taking over
their services...

rounding, charting,
whatever needs to get done.

This is a chance for you
to step up.

Isn't that what
we normally do?

It is the same,

- but, also, more.
- This is a contest.

So keep track of
everything you do,

and whoever accomplishes
the most by the end of the day

gets to scrub in with me
on a whipple.

- Me! I want to do that.
- Yes. Yes, please.

- Okay. Go.
- Go.

- Okay.
- Oh, wait. Hold on.

Did anyone
eat cookies this morning?

A patient brought in cookies
that had rat poison in them.

They were weed cookies,
accidental weed cookies.

They were in a floral tin.
Did anyone eat them?

- No.
- No.

- No.
- Nope.

- Okay. Get to work.
- Okay. Now go.

Uh, yes.

Okay. Bailey's
paging me a 911 from the OR.

I got to go.

Dr. Bailey.

Grey. I'm feeling dizzy
and light-headed and...

I think something's
wrong with her.

I think I know what it is.

Can we page Jo Wilson?

I thought it was my heart.

No, this is your brain
on drugs.

Wait. All of them?

All of my attendings
had a cookie, Grey?

No, just a few and you.

Oh, this is bad.

This is very,
very bad.

I opened that man up.

I'm into his peritoneum.

I'm into him.

Dr. Bailey,
it's okay. I'm here.

I'm going to finish this for you.

- Total gastrectomy.
- Mm.

I got it. I called Jo Wilson.

- Hey.
- She's gonna come...

- Hey.
- She's here.

Wilson's here. Why?

Dr. Bailey had a cookie.

Oh, crap.

Why are you laughing?

This is not funny.

This is very not funny.
I'm the chief.

It's very serious.

Will you take the chief
up to the lecture hall, please?

Yes. Yes.

- I have this, Dr. Bailey, okay?
- Mnh.

You'll do a good job?

'Cause he's very sweet,
and his kids are very scared.

Dr. Bailey. I have this.

- I love you.
- Oh, my.

- Okay, okay.
- Ohh!

What?

- Oops.
- Go, go, go.

I don't think they're broken,
but they're too swollen to move.

- This is a bad idea.
- It's the only idea.

He's already open,
and this procedure

takes delicate suturing,
which I cannot do.

But I've never done
a gastrectomy by myself before.

Yeah, but you've watched a lot.

You can do this.
I believe in you.

Okay, now you sound stoned.

Dr. Grey, patient's BP is dropping a bit.

Scrub.

- Hey.
- Calvary's here.

- Oh.
- Is the baby here yet?

Not... Not yet. What...
What's he doing here?

The baby's not sick, I hope.

A patient accidentally
brought in pot cookies.

He's high.

So you brought him here?

Well, I wanted to get here
as fast as possible.

I didn't want you to freak out.

Oh, yeah. Bingo.

And I couldn't leave him
alone in my lab

full of very expensive equipment.

- Huh.
- Are you okay?

- Did you eat a cookie?
- No, no.

I am waiting for a 6-month-old,

and you bring a stoned guy
to my house?!

We'll just make him hide in the back

while the social worker's where.

Listen... you go shower.

I'm gonna take care
of cleaning the house.

Okay, okay. I can't believe
this is happening.

It is. It's good.

- Uh!
- Hm, hm, dude.

You're so screwed
right now.

- Hey.
- Hey!

This room is occupied.

- Oops.
- It's okay.

- Sorry, hi. I'm... sorry.
- Just... It's fine.

- What do we do now?
- Huh?

Oh, we just have to wait for it
to pass.

But we can... I mean, we can
hang out and talk, you know?

- Just say whatever comes into our heads.
- Mm.

Just press "play"
and... see what comes out.

I really want some cheese.

I pressed fast-forward
on Carina, I think.

It's... such a good food.

There are so many kinds.

I asked her to...
I asked her to stay here

instead of going back to Italy.

Oh. Cheddar.

String cheese.

Brie.

The kind with the holes
in it. It's...

You know, we haven't even really
been dating that long.

Swiss!

Oh, I probably freaked her out.

I mean, who... who asks a person

to give up their country for them?

Sometimes I just stand
in the cheese section

of the grocery store and just...

Mozzarella.

Gouda. Munster.

She'd be a woman
without a country.

Dill Havarti.

Whoa!

It goes away.

Oh, and then it comes back.

Goes away.

- No country.
- Comes back.

It goes away. Comes back.

What happened?

I heard something I think
I should not have heard.

Also, I've never done pot before.

Oh, neither have I.
I listen to Mr. T.

Mr. T said...

"Kid, don't do drugs."

"Stay in school."

"Treat your mama right."

I followed Mr. T to a "T."

I dared to stay off drugs.

What did you hear?

I don't hear anything.

No. What did you hear?

About what?

You said you heard something
you shouldn't have.

- What did you hear?
- Oh.

Oh, my God!

Oh, it was...
it was bad.

It was... really
end-of-an-era bad.

It's the end of an era.

I thought marijuana
made people peaceful,

but I don't think
I ever hated you more.

Okay, I just divided
the gastrocolic ligament,

and now I'm gonna take down
the short gastric arteries,

which I'll ligate with 2-0 silks.

Does that sound good?

Okay.

- Wait, hang on.
- Hmm.

Bailey said a total gastrectomy?

- Yes. Why?
- Well, because

the tumor feels smaller
and more localized

than it did on the scans.

Why wouldn't Bailey want
to save more of his stomach?

I'm not sure.

She doesn't want the guy
to die of cancer... I know that.

Do you think we can do
a subtotal gastrectomy?

What do you think?

Can I take a look at the pre-op scans?

I don't have them.

Can I see the scans?

Of course, Doctor.

Okay.

There's 13 women.
How did I not know that?

I mean H-How did I... How...

Why are you so calm?

The cookie might have
something to do with it.

You're messing with me.

- No, I'm not.
- Very funny.

You're messing with me
because I'm a little high.

- Or because you're a little high.
- This is not a joke, Jackson.

This is a secret
you let out of the bag.

How could this even be kept
a secret at all?

Money, honey.
Good God, don't be naive.

A fortune was paid
to silence those women.

No. I understand that, okay?

I'm saying, "Why?"
Why would anyone protect him?

Why didn't anybody try to stop him?
Why didn't you try to stop him?

Because that's not
how it worked.

And... the hope was,
for some, that,

if the financial hit to your
grandfather was great enough,

he would stop the behavior.

And he did.
He did stop.

Oh.

You did this.

You covered this up.

Oh, Mom.

I'm gonna need child locks and stuff.

Not yet. Not till they're crawling.

Babies are easy.

You just have to support
their necks like this.

You were supposed
to stay in the bedroom

until after
the social worker leaves.

Smells like Owen in there.

Oh, crap.
I just crushed chip baby.

Get back there.

This chip smells like Owen.

- They're here already.
- Okay.

- Take a deep breath.
- Didn't think it would be a baby.

I thought it would be a kid
who I could win over

with, you know,
conversation and ice cream,

but a baby?

- I just...
- Okay, Owen. Look at me.

We're just gonna take a minute.

I can't think of anyone who is
more prepared for parenthood...

- Hi.
- Dr. Hunt?

I'm Elaine Hodge, DSHS.

And this is Leo.

No, no. I'm Dr. Hunt. Owen.

And this is my friend, Amelia.

Oh, he's cute.
You got a cute one.

Sometimes, they look like
an old man.

- Who's this?
- He's just a... you know...

Dr. Alex Karev.

I'm the Chief of, uh, Pediatric
Surgery at Grey-Sloan.

I came by to give the baby
a quick check-up.

Make sure he doesn't have
signs of jaundice

or RSV or rickets.

That is so nice. Here you go.

- No.
- No, no. I-I got him.

I got him. I got him. I got him.

Yeah. Yep, yep, yep.

Hey.

Would you like some chips?

Engineering to 3 West.
Engineering to 3 West.

Oh, Dr. Qadri.

What happened to the board?

Dr. Grey cancelled everything.

It looks like she postponed
the contest, too.

- Why?
- I don't know.

Um, there was a situation...

with some cookies.

Cook... Cookies?

Yes! I'm here. I'm here first!

Patient's in septic shock.

Systolic's in the 90s and falling,

heart rate 130s.

He had a bolus of LR, but...

Oh, man.
He needs a central line.

Then put one in!

I... You do it.

I can't! You're the surgeon.

No, I can't. I'll get someone!

Dr. Roy! I need help in here!

- Watch out.
- Help!

Oh. Helm, go. Take him.

Parker, help me with Roy.

My patient needs a central line!

- I'm on it!
- Casey, get some gloves.

Got it.

Easy, Roy. Easy.

I see why Bailey wanted
to remove the whole stomach.

The tumor is huge. It looks
like it's in the cardia.

I should just follow
standard of care,

a total resection, right?

Why do you keep asking me?

Because you aren't answering.

What are the considerations?

Okay, okay,
if I do a total gastrectomy,

it'll make sure
I remove all the cancer,

but he'll eat through
a feeding tube

for the rest of his life.

If I leave part of the stomach,

then he'll have
a way better quality of life

unless I leave behind cancer cells,

in which case, he dies
because I kill him.

Okay, you know what?
I'm... I'm doing a total.

- Are you sure?
- Yes. I'm a resident.

I should just follow
the surgery as planned.

You're supposed to do
what's best for the patient.

He's not my patient...
he's Bailey's,

and she handed him off
to you, not me,

- so what do I do?
- Wilson, you're a surgeon.

Pull up your big-girl scrubs
and make a call.

- There's a life in your hands.
- I know.

I just wish
there was some way to know

that I was removing
all of the cancer

and not leaving any behind...

The Pen. I need the Pen.

I have one in my lab coat.
It's not sterile.

No, no, no.
I need you to find Dr. Webber.

Okay, easy, easy.

Oh, Dr. Webber, I...

Oh, my God! What happened?!

Okay, it was an accident.
We need to get him to trauma.

- What do you need, Schmitt?
- I'm supposed to ask

to borrow your...
your Path Pen.

And Dr. Grey and Dr. Wilson
want to know

if it can detect
gastric adenocarcinoma.

It can, and it's in my office,
but I don't want you to go...

- Whoa!
- Whoa.

Okay. Whoa, whoa, whoa. Okay.

Let's move. Now.

Does it feel right with Carina?

Boop.

'Cause, you know,
sometimes you can feel scared,

but, then,
you're lying together at night,

and it just feels right.

Yeah.

Yeah, it feels right.

Callie is fun and funny,
and the sex is really great.

- Carina.
- Hm? What?

You said "Callie."

- No, I didn't.
- Yes, you did.

- No, I didn't.
- Yes, you did.

- You're high!
- Yes, I am, but you said it.

Press the "rewind" button
on your mind.

Oh, my God. I did.

Why did I...
Why did I do that?

- Boop.
- They're very different people.

They don't laugh alike.
They don't walk alike.

They definitely don't talk alike.

- Boop.
- So that's weird.

Boop. I like that sound.

But both of them
definitely know

how to make me lose my mind...

- in bed.
- Hey, where's the liver?

- Then...
- I lost the liver!

Callie just went away.

She took my daughter and
got on a plane, and she left.

What? Um. Have you seen it?

It's... It's liver-shaped.

Maybe Eliza Minnick
took a plane, too.

I have no idea because
she ghosted me, so

- Okay, it's red.
- There's that.

It helped metabolize things,

it eliminated toxins,
and now it's gone!

Eventually,
everyone leaves me.

You know?

- They got on...
- I lost the liver.

Planes or ghostmobiles
or wherever...

they just disappear.

And maybe that's why I held on
so hard to Carina, you know?

Like I was afraid that I was
gonna lose her like I...

like I lose everybody else.

Maybe I'm just scared
of repeating the past.

- What if she dies?!
- Whoa.

Because I lost the liver!

It's not... It's not good.

I'm not surprised.

I met Harper Avery two times,
and he was awful.

Awful man.

He had a beak like an owl
and a very dry mouth.

I have a very dry mouth.
Do you have that?

Grey has a Harper Avery.
She is part of a family legacy.

Yang was nominated for one.

She was the best
in our class.

I always wanted
a Harper Avery.

I had a Jackson Avery.

It's not the same thing.

I have a secret.

I don't even need this contest,

'cause I just signed a contract
with a manufacturer.

Mm. I'm gonna be rich.

They cannot keep a secret.

- I know about Harper.
- Mm.

- And I know about Maggie.
- Mm-hmm.

We're going
to make the TrailBlazer.

Me and Midnight Pleasures, Inc.

I saw them pull into
the parking lot together.

They live on opposite sides of town.

There's only one reason
that they would carpool.

My husband said,
"You really want to go

into business with
a sex-toy company?"

But I have a secret,
too.

I've been seeing someone.

I said to him,
"I have a colonoscopy device.

It goes into people's rectums.

This company already has items
that function similarly.

Don't make it nasty."

Wait. What?

You're making
your colonoscopy TrailBlazer

with a sex-toy company?

Meredith Grey
called it the "TAILBlazer."

That's where I got the idea.

Dr. Schmitt? Is it over?

Dr. Bailey said
it wouldn't take this long.

- Is he okay?
- He's not out yet.

I had to get some equipment
so we can finish.

Oh, my God. What is that?

Something went wrong, didn't it?

Something unexpected?

Is my dad gonna die?

Please don't let him die,
Dr. Schmitt.

No. No. There's no complication.

And I will do everything I can
to make sure he's all right.

In fact, I'm gonna do that right now.

What was I thinking?

You can tell, right, that
I don't know what I'm doing?

"Yes, I hate you already.

You're the worst."

Alex, stop it.

"No, you're making me
high-strung and competitive

as we speak!"

- You are not helping.
- No, no. He's right.

They say all those kids tend
to have type-A personalities

'cause their parents are so stressed

about every little thing,

and then, second baby comes along

and they're more comfortable,

so that kid gets
to be more easygoing.

You just explained so much.

Yeah, I always thought Megan
was lucky that way.

I was thinking about me being
the youngest of five.

"Am I getting a little sister?

When's she coming?"

Alex.

Wait. This isn't the way
to the store.

Nope. This group is not ready
to be seen in public,

but I know where to get
everything you need

because my sister-in-law
is a pack rat.

"Daddy, can I have a pony?"

Shh, shh.

It really works?

Well, it's supposed to.
It's still in the testing stage.

We're testing it? On this guy?

He... He's got a wife and two kids.

They're very nice, and they really,
really want him to stay alive.

And I promised them
I'd make sure he gets

the best possible care.

So, maybe, Dr. Grey,

- if you could just tell Dr. Wilson...
- Schmitt, be quiet. She's got it.

Hey, look. The distal end...

Adenocarcinoma.

But if I go one centimeter proximally...

It works.

It's working.

Oh, my God.

I'm gonna save half his stomach.

Linear stapler.

Time of death... 16:06.

Acute liver...

disappearance.

We did everything we could,
but we could not save her.

Our thoughts and prayers are with her,

her family, and her friends.

Good. Now you'll want
to ligate the branch.

Why are you letting them
do this?

Because they need to practice.

Does it have to be on me?

Roy, I'm gonna give you
a light sedation.

Thank you.

Mm.

Wait. Wait.

Is that diazepam?

Does that interact with...
other drugs?

Okay, we fed you. We changed you.

Everything's okay.

This is a very, very, very long scarf.

That's a Moby.

You wrap it around yourself and
the baby so you can carry him.

Okay, calm down.
Calm down, Leo.

It's okay. It's okay.

Do you want a diaper genie?

Does he come to the house?

Uh, I guess so.

How do you know
what all this stuff is?

You'll figure it out.

Okay, I got you.
I got you. Shh, shh, shh.

Amelia?

Was this a bad idea?

What? No.
You've wanted this forever.

Yeah, I know what I wanted,
but what about him?

You know, who's to say
I was supposed to be a father?

Maybe this was all going
how it was supposed to,

- and I just forced it.
- Owen,

what you're doing is
beautiful.

You're fostering him.

You're...
You're being there for him

when nobody else is.

- Ha!
- My foster parents sucked.

- Alex!
- No, for real.

They just stuck me in a room
with some other kids

and then collected a check.

Except for one.
There was one guy.

He worked nights
in a warehouse.

Come home, dead tired
at the crack of dawn,

and... go straight to bed.

But then, an hour later,
he'd wake up,

just so he could eat cereal with me

and tell me,
you know, "Have a good day,"

before I went to school.

Then he'd go back to sleep.

Wasn't much, but, you know,
he just gave a crap, you know?

He gave a crap, and you, my friend,

you are giving
so many craps right now.

This man's got it made.

He's not crying.

Look. I did it.

Mnh. Maybe not.

It was a very different time then.

It was his name.
It was his foundation.

He made the rules.

Oh, please stop talking, Mom.

I'm just trying to help you

- understand.
- Well, I wish

- you would help those women.
- Look at me.

You told me to step up.

You wanted to buy this hospital,
I wanted nothing to do with it,

and you said,
"Step up. Take the lead.

Take part in what
this family has built," right?

- And you did.
- You didn't tell me

- what the hell it was built on.
- No, no.

You do not get to do that.

You do not get to stand there
in judgment of me.

- That...
- 30 years ago, getting harassed at work,

getting groped at work wasn't
something we could protest.

It was something we had to take
with our morning coffee.

It was part of the job.

And if we made a noise, if we fussed,

we were told
we were overreacting

and, more often than not,
we lost the job

and our reputation
along with it.

I was not then
who I am now.

I didn't have the voice then
that I have now.

I had choices.

I could stand there
and let your grandfather

fire those women
and drag them through the mud,

or I could make sure
they got some money,

a leg to stand on,
a path to move forward on.

I'm not ashamed of myself,
Jackson,

but I am ashamed
of what your grandfather did.

And I'm so sorry that now

you have to carry that burden
along with me.

And I'm sorry that that burden
might just bring this family,

this entire hospital,

and all of his hospitals down.

Okay. That's it.

Now what?

Well, now we cross
our fingers

and pray
we made the right decision.

You did.

You did exactly what I would
have done, except for The Pen.

I wouldn't have needed that.

You could have saved me a lot
of stress if you told me sooner.

Well, that's not how you learn.

I'm pretty sure
having an experienced surgeon

tell you what to do
is exactly how you learn.

You know exactly
what to do.

You're a highly competent surgeon.

You've memorized
and practiced every move,

but making tough choices
under immense pressure...

that's how you become
a truly great surgeon.

And now you get
to go tell his family that,

not only did you save his life,

you saved his quality of life.

I'm gonna go check on our stoners.

Nice work.

What's happening?

We're having a funeral.

Whose?

Mm, Harper Avery.

The Harper Averies.
The end of an era.

What are you talking about?

You were put into
a terrible position, Mom,

and I doubted you.

I forgot who you were
for a moment. I'm sorry.

It's all right, baby.

I don't know
what's gonna happen next,

but it's not gonna be good.

Well, we just got to tell the truth

and get out ahead of this thing.

We'll get in touch with those
women and make this right.

Yeah. Yeah.

Tell me it isn't true.

I've spent my whole life
working for that award.

What did Harper Avery do?

Well, I guess
we might as well start now.

Mm-hmm.

We're gonna start with you,
Meredith.

So, was my mother
one of these women?

No. No, your mother
was not one of the women.

So, these women...
they were offered money

in exchange for what exactly?

In exchange for silence
and an agreement

that they would never
work at a Harper Avery hospital

or enter the Harper Avery Awards.

I mean,
my mother spent her career

trying to win Harper Avery Awards.

She lost her best friend over it.

His initials take up
half the space in her journals.

Oh, my God.

Does the name Marie Cerone
mean anything to you?

Yes.
She was one of the women.

So my mother had to take
her name off of the paper

or she would never be able
to win a Harper Avery.

Son of a bitch.

Will I be able to do surgery again?

No. Your tox screen
came back positive.

This morning, you were asked
if you had eaten a cookie,

and you said, "No."

Half the attendings ate those cookies!

And acted responsibly.

You lied so you could get
another surgery.

You put patients at risk.

So... I-I'm suspended?

No.

You're fired.

Surgeons can benefit

from altered states of
consciousness...

but only when

- they're achieved naturally.
- The women allege that

Dr. Harper Avery
made unwanted advances

and then barred them
from working at any hospital

that received funding
from his foundation,

effectively crippling
their medical careers.

Today, they say they're
finished being silenced.

The lows drive us to do better.

Well, we're not out ahead of it.

Hey.

I heard about the cookies.

Do you need a ride home?

You're still here.

Of course. I wouldn't leave
without saying goodbye.

The highs of saving a life are
the reward

- ♪ You and me will be always ♪
- for a job well done.

♪ I'll be honest,
there's a lot I don't know ♪

♪ So much of this is out of our control ♪

Here's his jacket and bag,

and I packed him snacks
for the road.

- Thanks.
- You look happy.

I had a really,
really good day.

♪ 'Cause there's a short list
of people in it for the long haul ♪

And then there are times when
our state of mind is altered,

and it has nothing to do
with brain chemistry.

- He's finally down?
- Yeah.

I think I was down to 35 bottles
of beer on the wall.

I heard.

Ohh.
I've had him less than 24 hours,

and I expose him to drugs
and heavy drinking.

I'm corrupting a baby.

You still worried about
screwing him up?

No, I moved on to worrying

about SIDS and... rickets, yeah.

Well, you're supposed
to worry about that.

If you weren't worried
about that, I would be worried.

Mm-hmm.

- You're gonna be fine.
- Yeah.

You should go get some sleep
while he sleeps.

- Mm. I'm just gonna sleep here.
- Mm.

Mm.

Okay. Thank you for coming.

Okay.

♪ That nothing in this world
can change ♪

♪ Hey ♪

♪ You and me will be always ♪

♪ Always ♪

♪ You and me will be always ♪

What are you...? You staying?

Yeah, I figure for one night.

Thank God.
I mean, uh, thank you.

She's staying.
Yeah.

- Ooh. Hey.
- Hi, baby.

Why are you wide awake?

- Why are you still awake?
- Yes. Yeah.

- It's time for sleep, little Leo.
- There you go. There you go.

New opportunities open us up
to greater possibilities.

♪ I'm gonna be your
always always ♪

♪ Hey ♪

♪ You and me will be always ♪

♪ Now, see, your clothes,
your shoes, and your best friends ♪

- ♪ They ain't gonna stay the same ♪
- All right. Come on.

Harper Avery.
I can't believe it.

I know.

Did Jackson know?

Not until today.

♪ The one thing that nothing
in this world can change ♪

- What are you gonna do?
- I don't know.

♪ Hey ♪

♪ You and me will be always ♪

♪ Always, yeah ♪

♪ You and me will be always ♪

New information
and a new perspective

can permanently
shift our consciousness.

And the way we see the world
will never be the same.

Synchronized by srjanapala

♪♪