DISCLAIMER: We don't own anything here. - House by FOX and NBC/Universal, produced by Heel & Toe Films and Bad Hat Harry Productions. - Lost by ABC, produced by J.J. Abrams & Damon Lindelof and Bad Robot. - Desperate Housewives by ABC, produced by Marc Cherry. These transcripts are unofficial, and must not be reproduced for commercial distribution without permission from the shows affiliates. They are viewers' experience of tv series listed and have no liason with the affiliates.

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Season 2 X 03 : Humpty Dumpty


Original Airdate: 9/27/2005
Written by: Matt Witten
Directed by: Daniel Attias
Transcript by: Jen


BEGINNING

[Cuddy is jogging.]

Cuddy [to neighbor]: Morning.

[Cuddy reaches her front yard and stops. There is man on a ladder working on, presumably, her roof].

Cuddy: Hey, Alfredo. You done already?

Alfredo: Ah, no, not yet. I finish tomorrow.

Cuddy: Mexico playing Argentina on TV?

Alfredo: No, no. My asthma is very bad.

Cuddy: For six years, Alfedro. You can’t lie to me. I’m throwing a dinner.

Alfredo: First thing tomorrow.

Cuddy: Party’s tonight. It’ll rain. I’ll have to put buckets on the dining room table.

Alfredo: No clouds, no rain.

Cuddy: I’ll tell you what. You take off. But if it pours into my guest’s wine glasses…

Alfredo: Okay. Okay, senora, I’ll do it.

[Cuddy walks back towards the door, glancing towards Alfredo.]

Alfredo: No problema.

[Cuddy enters her house, throws keys on the dining room table, and goes into her kitchen. She opens the fridge and pours herself a glass of water. She walks to the window and starts to choke on the water. A slight scream is heard. Suddenly, Alfedro falls off the roof.]

[Ambulance.]

[Alfredo is on the stretcher, with neck collar and full spinal precautions. Cuddy is moving a stethoscope across his chest.]

Cuddy: Spinal cord seems intact. Take a deep breath.

[Alfredo tries and wheezes.]

Alfredo: It hurts.

Cuddy: Try. Breath sounds bilateral. I don’t think he has a pneumothorax.

Alfredo: [still wheezing] Just asthma.

Cuddy: That and probably a broken rib. Tell me when it hurts the most.

[Cuddy pushes down and Alfredo squirms in pain. Cuddy notices that two fingers on his right hand are discolored.]

Cuddy: Your two little fingers are darker than the others.

Alfredo: They feel funny…like needles.

Cuddy: How long have they been like that?

Alfredo: I’ve never noticed before. Is bad?

[Cuddy looks up. It’s bad.]

[Opening Credits.]

[Hospital Hallway.]

Cuddy: Judging by how it looks, he could lose his hand.

Wilson: How does falling off your roof do that to a guy’s fingers?

House: Could have tweaked a vertebrae in his neck. Could have pinged on the ulnar…[House is staring down at a red stain on Cuddy’s tank top just below her breasts.] Sorry, trouble concentrating. That tank top really absorbs moisture.

[Cuddy reached to pull her sweater closer around her.]

House: Could have pinged the ulnar nerve, cut the blood flow. Or it could be Disseminated intravascular coagulation.

Wilson: DIC.? Guy falls off a roof, the first thought is it’s always a clotting problem

House: Trauma can activate the clotting enzymes. Guy could loose more than his hand.

Cuddy: Thank you, very much. This guy’s been working for me for a long time and I--

House [takes chart]: Do I get bonus points if I act like I care?

[Cuddy just looks at him.]

[House’s Office.]

[House enters, sucking on a lollipop.]

House: Cervical MRI, work up for DIC, and start him on a heparin drip

Cameron: Who?

House: You want to know his name? [throws file down on the table] I’m sure it’s in the file.

[Cuddy enters.]

House: Or you could ask her. She’s his oldest, bestest friend. They were in Cub Scouts together.

Cuddy: I’ll get started on the blood tests.

House: You haven’t been a real doctor in ten years, you’ll make a mess all over the sheet.

Foreman: I’ll do it.

Cuddy: You have clinic duty. I still know how to handle a patient.

House: Get me blood. Lots of blood.

[Cameron reads through Alfedro’s chart and makes a face. The ducklings get up.]

House: They’re better. They’ve showered.

[Hallway.]

[Cuddy is peering into Alfredo’s room where Chase is taking blood. Stacy comes up behind her.]

Stacy: You don’t need to see him.

Cuddy: One-handed handyman aren’t in big demand.

Stacy: Talking, that’s how law suits are lost. I know you, Lisa, you go in, you offer to pay his medical bills, his wages, you’ll say something stupid like I’m sorry—

Cuddy: You think I’m an idiot?

Stacy: I think you’re not a lawyer. Don’t go in there. [puts a hand on Cuddy’s shoulder]. Trust me, House’s people can handle this.

[Stacy walks away, Cuddy still looks at the room.]

Cuddy [softly]: Yeah…

[Alfredo’s Room]

Chase: This might sting a little bit. The medicine will thin and the blood and help it to circulate.

[Chase looks at Alfredo left hand. There’s four scars, lines that look like four deep scratches.]

Chase: Those pretty nasty scars there.

Alfredo: They were construction.

Alfredo winces in pain as Chase injects him.

Alfredo: How long will I be in the hospital?

Chase: Depends how long it takes us to figure out what’s going on.

Alfredo: I need to work. I’ll get fired.

Chase: I’m sure Dr. Cuddy won’t fire you.

Alfredo: I’m janitor at fast food six nights. I need to work. My mother doesn’t make enough.

Brother (Manny): I can work, I’m old enough.

Alfredo: You’re old enough when you finish college

Brother (Manny): Why? You never went to—

Alfredo: I never had a big brother to tell me to shut up!

Chase: I promise, we’ll let you out of here as soon as we’re able to

Alfredo: Look, I…I am fine. [takes pulse ox off, and reaches for the oxygen cannula]. I feel better.

Chase: No..

Alfredo: I go home now.

Chase: No, if this is a clotting problem, it could be very serious. All right?

Alfredo: Can’t make me stay.

Alfredo takes to get up again. Chase pushes him back down and Alfredo groans.

Alfredo: You can’t make me stay.

[Chase notices Alfredo’s right hand.]

Chase: Turn your hand over. I need to see your hand.

[Chase reaches for it. The last two fingers are almost completely black and it’s spreading onto the middle finger.]

Alfredo: Where is Dr. Cuddy?

[House’s office.]

[House and Cuddy are there.]

Chase: We’re got a third finger turning dark.

Cameron: His PTT is prolonged, the fibrin split products are off, he’s not clotting properly. It looks like a middle case of DIC.

House: Well, obviously not that mild. This keeps up and his hand will literally be dead meat. His hand is connected to his arm, his arm is connected to…I’m not sure, but I bet it’s important.

Cuddy: All this from falling off my roof…

House: Yeah, if only he’d fallen on his head. Then he wouldn’t have any of these symptoms.

[Cuddy looks at him in disbelief.]

Cuddy: We need something stronger than heparin. Human activated protein C.

House: Looks like Cuddy, same cleavage. Protein C is indicated only for severe sepsis.

Cuddy: Well, how many of his limbs have to be at stake, for it to be severe?

House: But this stuff is crazy dangerous. It can cause internal bleeding. If he bleeds, he could stroke, he could die.

Cuddy: He could get better.

House: You know, if I tried a scheme like this, you’d give me that nasty, wrinkly face and screech like a hyena. [House approached Cuddy until he is barely a foot away.] It’s very sexy, I admit.

[Cuddy is speechless a second before she starts to walk away.]

Cuddy: Do it.

[Hallway.]

[House and Wilson step out of the elevator.]

House: Protein C is border-line irresponsible. ‘Cept that the safe stuff isn’t doing squat.

Wilson: This is exactly the type of thing you would do.

House: Well, obviously.

[Cuddy’s office.]

Stacy: It’s actually the type of thing he’d do.

Cuddy: I know. I think he’s trying to protect me.

Stacy: Now that’s not the type of thing he would do.

Cuddy: I overruled him. He’s the best diagnostician in this hospital, and I overrule him.

[Stacy and Cuddy sit.]

Stacy: You care about this kid. You judgment should be worth more than his.

Cuddy: He also pointed out that I haven’t been a real doctor in years.

Stacy: Now that sounds like him.

[Hallway.]

[House reaches into a jar filled with lollipops at the nurse’s station.]

Wilson: You were just jerking Cuddy around?

[House pulls out three lollipops.]

House: You seriously thought I wanted to stop her?

Wilson: One thing Cuddy is not is clueless.

House: No, first causality of this case is her sense of humor.

Wilson: Weird, nothing funnier than almost killing a guy.

[Clinic.]

[Foreman is treating an older African-American man.]

Patient: I’m just having trouble getting up those steps.

Foreman: When did you start noticing?

Patient: Well, a week ago.

Foreman: Your blood pressure’s a little high. I have something new that should help you out. Combines a nitrate with a blood pressure pill. It’s targeted to African-Americans.

Patient: Targeted?

Foreman: Yeah, well, see we tend to have nitric oxide deficiencies. The studies show this drug counteracts that problem. It’s the first drug to—

Patient: What kind of studies you talking about?

Foreman: What kind of studies are there? They get some patients, they give ‘em some drugs…

Patient: Ah…I’ve had white people lying to me for 60 years.

Foreman: You think this is a tan?

Patient: You think they tell you everything?

Foreman: Trouble with us black folk, we can’t tell the difference anymore between racism and everybody gets screwed.

Patient: Yeah? Well how about them cheap meningitis drugs they pawning off in Africa? Gonna tell me that ain’t racism?

Foreman: That’s just greed. You really want to screw whitie? Be one of the few black men to live long enough to collect social security. [rips off a prescription slip]. Take the medicine.

[Patient takes the script.]

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Alfredo realizes he can’t feel his arm.]

Alfredo: Nurse. Nurse! Help!

[Chase rushes in.]

Alfredo: Nurse! Help! Nurse!

Chase: What’s up?

Alfredo [very upset]: I can’t move my arm. I can’t move my arm!

Chase: Take it easy, take it easy.

[Cuddy’s office.]

[Chase is talking to Cuddy.]

Chase: Protein C’s side effects we were worried about? They happened.

Cuddy: Where was the bleed?

Chase: His brain. It’s causing right side paralysis. I’ve stopped the treatment. And called a neurosurgeon.

[OR.]

[Surgeon is drilling into Alfredo’s head. Cuddy is watching from the observation deck. Blood is pooling out from the drilled hole.]

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Cameron is flashing a penlight into Alfredo’s pupils. Alfredo lifts his right hand and waves it back and forth slowly.]

Alfredo: I can move it now. It’s okay now. Can I go home soon?

[Cameron lowers the penlight.]

Cameron: The surgery went well, but all we did was fix the problem created by the medicine we gave you.

[Mother asks a question in Spanish.]

Alfredo: She says you look young. Are you sure you—

Cameron: There’s five of us working on the case. [She smiles hesitantly] The others are older.

Alfredo: Why doesn’t Dr. Cuddy come to --

[Alfredo starts coughing and Cameron reaches for a glass of water. She hands it to him.]

Cameron: You don’t sound too good.

[She reaches for her stethoscope. Alfredo’s breathing is ragged.]

[CGI shot of his lungs. They are bleeding.]

[House’s office.]

[Cuddy is studying an x-ray.]

Cameron: His fingers are even darker, his temperature is 102 and spiking, and the x-ray now shows lung infiltrates.

[House writes “lung infiltrates” across the white board.]

House: The good news is he won’t be bitching about losing his hand if he can’t breathe.

Cuddy: The trauma from the fall could cause actuate respiratory distress syndrome.

House: Right, I forgot. Your roof.

Cuddy: It would cause lung infiltrates and maybe fever and conceivably the cyanotic fingers.

House: The only question is why?

[House shakes out a Vicodin and takes it.]

Cameron: Why what?

House: Why her weird psychopathology requires a diagnosis formed entirely by personal guilt. Let’s assume we’ve been wrong up until now. Let’s assume, just for one second, that the earth doesn’t revolve around Cuddy’s roof. What if he was sick before he had his run-in with gravity? He just didn’t notice anything.

Foreman: Well, pneumonia can cause DIC, which can cause cyanotic fingers.

Chase: Pneumonia doesn’t hit that fast.

House: Sure, only pavement hits that fast. It’s not pneumonia. Might have missed a finger turning dark, he’s not going to miss breathing problems. What else?

Cuddy [looking at x-ray]: It’s pneumonia. He wanted to go home. I thought he was lying. I told him I had a dinner party. I made him go up there.

House: Well, why didn’t you just take out a gun and shoot him?

Cuddy: I thought it was just asthma.

House: Might have mentioned this earlier, Doctor. Maybe we could have sent some blood cultures to the lab, instead of wasting a day indulging your self-loathing.

Cameron: If it’s just garden-variety bacterial pneumonia, he’s gonna be fine.

House: So give him garden-variety Levaquin and a garden-variety echo-cardiogram. And go check out the kid’s house.

Cuddy: The blood work will show us which type of pneumonia it is, if—

House: If he’s huffing nail polish, or pulling the wings off his pet parrot, this way will be faster. I bet Julio is just dying to find out what’s wrong with him. [nods to Cameron]. Go with her.

Cuddy: It’s Alfredo. And I can handle getting a key and—

House: Rico and I know longer trust you deciding what’s important and what’s not.

[Cuddy stares a moment, then leaves. Cameron shakes her head, and then follows.]

Foreman: You ever think about writing a book on office politics?

House: Trust me. It would be a lot worse if I told her you have to break into her house.

Chase: Wait, wait, wait. Cuddy’s house?

House: See, it is shocking. Guy’s been working there every day for the last three weeks. Do you think it’s impossible that he could have picked something up?

Foreman: I’m not breaking into my boss’s house.

House: I’m your boss.

Chase: She’s scarier than you are.

House: Oh, she’s a woman. Relax, I’m coming with.

[Hallway.]

[House, Chase, and Foreman step out of the elevator. House is sucking on yet another lollipop. They pass Wilson and Stacy.]

Stacy: House is having lunch with his juniors now?

Wilson: No. Not a chance.

Stacy: Then where do you think they’re going?

Wilson: I have no idea.

Stacy: Then why don’t you think they’re going to lunch?

Wilson: Because it’s not like House. That was your point, right?

Stacy: He had that smug look on his face when he’s not pleased about something and he’s got to tell somebody and the only somebody he knows is you.

Wilson [sighs]: He’s breaking into Cuddy’s home.

Stacy: What? Why?

Wilson: Um, medical reasons?

Stacy: Why is he so curious about Cuddy?

Wilson: Why are you so curious about his curiosity?

Stacy: Why are you so curious about me being—

Wilson: Because you dumped him. And you’re married. And they are neither of those things.

Stacy: I’m just curious. Nothing wrong with that.

Wilson: No, nothing wrong with that.

Cuddy’s house, exterior.

[House, Foreman, and Chase walk up to Cuddy’s front door.]

House: What do you think? Red thongs? I think red thongs. ‘Kay…

[House takes out a credit card.]

House: Twenty bucks says I can get through this door in twenty seconds.

Chase: You’re on.

Foreman: Count me in.

[Chase takes out his watch to time House. House bends down, moves a planter, and finds key underneath it. House grins and Chase and Foreman get out their wallets. House opens the door and Chase and Foreman file in, each handing him a twenty.]

[Alfredo’s home.]

[Cuddy has a hall closet open.]

Cuddy: No furniture polish, no paint thinner, nor anything else worth sniffing.

[Cuddy moves into the kitchen.]

Cameron [calling from another room]: Nothing in here, either.

[Cameron comes out of a bedroom.]

Cameron: Except a few cockroaches.

[Cameron steps on one with her shoe.]

Cameron: Nice. [She looks up] Someone should fix Alfredo’s roof. So why haven’t you fired House?

[Cuddy looks up from the fridge.]

Cameron: I mean, it’s just, you guys are always screaming at each other and I figure you hate him—

Cuddy [quick to respond]: I don’t hate him.

Cameron: Why not?

[Cuddy just looks at her.]

Cameron: He’s a great doctor, but any other hospital administrator would have fired him years ago.

[Cuddy moves to look under the kitchen sink.]

Cuddy: Four of them did. The question is why did I hire him?

[Cuddy’s house.]

Foreman: So how did you know about her key? You been doing a little handyman work for Cuddy yourself?

[Foreman walks into the kitchen, where House is examining the contents under the kitchen sink.]

House: Someone as obsessive and insecure as Cuddy probably has three extra keys hidden within ten feet of the door.

Foreman: Oh, and you consider obsession a negative quality?

House: Insecticide is organic, soap is hypoallergenic.

[House closes the cabinet.]

House: I got the bedroom.

[Cuddy’s bedroom.]

[House enters and studies the bed.]

House: This is where it all happens.

[House turns and launches his butt onto the bed.]

[Alfredo’s house. Bedroom.]

[Cameron and Cuddy enter from the hall.]

Cameron: You both went to Michigan. Did you know him while you were there.

Cuddy: Ah, I was still an undergrad, but yeah, I knew him. He was already a legend.

Cameron: So you just knew him as a legend?

Cuddy: My God, you’re subtle! Anything else on your mind?

[Cameron looks at her a moment, then bends down to look under a set of bunk beds.]

Cameron: Ugh.

Cuddy: More cockroaches.

Cameron: Worse.

[Cuddy bends down to take a look. She sees a dead rat in a trap.]

Cuddy: Beautiful.

Cuddy’s bedroom.

[House opens the dresser drawer, while Chase looks out the window.]

Chase: There’s no way you deduced where that key was.

[House pulls a pink/reddish thong out of Cuddy’s underwear drawer.]

House: Does this count as red?

[He throws it at Chase, who catches it, then looks to get rid of it.]

Chase: You gave yourself twenty seconds, then put money on it.

House: Oh my God. She’s got pictures of you in here.

[Chase’s eyes widen.]

House: Just you. It’s like some kind of weird shrine.

Chase: You’re kidding.

[Chase approaches the dresser.]

House: Yeah.

[House shuts the drawer before Chase can see it.]

Cuddy’s bathroom.

[House enters and picks up a large tampon box off a shelf. Chase follows, but stops at the door.]

House: She uses super tampons. What does that mean?

Chase: You two are just too nasty to each other not to have been…nasty.

House: Hey, I can be a jerk to people I haven’t slept with. I am that good.

[House bends down to open the cabinet under the bathroom sink. Foreman enters.]

Foreman: There’s nothing here. Are you ready to go or you got some more stuff you want to sniff?

House: Whoa. Check this out. It’s fuzzy. It’s black. It’s alive.

[House reaches a finger out to the pipe under the sink. CSI shot of the bacteria growing there.]

[Hallway.]

[House, Foreman, and Chase are walking and run into an excited Cuddy and Cameron.]

Cuddy: Patient’s lung function is declining rapidly. Levaquin’s not working. He obviously doesn’t have garden-variety pneumonia.

House: I’m glad you learned to take his impending death in stride.

Cuddy: Guess what he does have.

Cameron: Rats.

House: Scars on his hand…

Cameron: Rat bites.

House: But he says they’re from construction work so he won’t have to admit he’s got rats in the home. Catholics are right. Pride will kill you.

Cuddy: He has Streptobacillosis.

Cameron: Rat bite fever.

House: Boogy, oggy, oogy.

Cuddy: It fits the symptoms perfectly.

House: It’s certainly one possibility. What about the aspergillus fungus we found under the sink?

[Cuddy picks up the x-ray.]

Cuddy: What sink?

[House dumps a tissue in the garbage.]

House: You ought to clean your bathroom better.

Cuddy: You broke into my house?

House: No, that would be wrong. I had a key.

Cuddy: You had no right to invade my privacy. There was no medical reason for that whatsoever. And there was certainly no moral reason for it.

[She looks at the x-ray as she’s talking and notices something.]

Cuddy: Oh damn. You’re right. The focal consolidation makes fungal pneumonia far more likely.

House: You’re right I’m right. On the bright side, it has the advantage of keeping you totally responsible.

Cameron: The treatment for aspergillus is amphotericin. That’s hugely dangerous.

Cuddy: Yeah. Your point being?

House: Going the dangerous and aggressive route didn’t work last time. It’s bound to work this time. Start him on the amphotericin.

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Cameron is injecting the new drug into the IV line. Alfredo is coughing and his family looks on. There is a close-up of Alfredo’s little brother.]

[Cuddy’s Office.]

Brother (Manny): Dr. Cuddy? I’m Manny. Alfredo’s brother.

Cuddy: Well, how’s he doing?

Manny: He’s worried about money. I want to work for you.

Cuddy [sighing]: How old are you Manny?

Manny: Fifteen.

Cuddy: Twelve?

Manny: I can paint, mow lawns, I rake leaves. I can start today.

Cuddy: Alfredo wants you to finish school.

Manny: Like you care.

Cuddy: Manny, I have known your brother—

Manny: He falls off your roof and you don’t come to see him once?

[Cuddy is unsure what to say.]

Manny: Bitch.

[Manny turns and leaves.]

[Clinic. Exam Room.]

[House is sitting in a chair, his feet propped up on the exam table. He is twirling his cane and watching his mini-TV. There’s a knock.]

House: With a patient.

[Door opens. It’s Stacy.]

Stacy: Not according to the log.

House: It’s three-fifteen.

Stacy: Is it a commercial?

[House responds by picking up a soda and sipping it.]

Stacy: How’s Cuddy doing?

House: She’s not acting like Cuddy. It’s a pleasure.

Stacy: You know her. She has trouble with these situations, feels personally responsible.

House: Technical term is narcissism. You can’t believe everything is your fault unless you also believe you’re all powerful.

Stacy: [sarcastic] Wow, doesn’t she sound messed up.

House: I don’t believe I can fix everything. I don’t lie awake at night tormented by that fact.

Stacy: No, you lie awake tormented by—

House: We were talking about Cuddy here.

[House starts to get up.]

Stacy: She cares.

House: She enjoys feeling guilty.

Stacy: Lisa cares. It’s why she drives you nuts. ‘Cause it’s not just a puzzle to her. The patients are actually real, their feeling actually relevant. And I’m telling you, she can’t even talk to him.

House: My God, it’s contagious. You’re feeling guilty, too.

Stacy: I’m just saying take it easy on her. You owe her that.

[House pauses a second.]

House: Commercial’s over.

Stacy: So glad we talked.

[Clinic. Exam room. Later.]

[House is listening to the chest of the same African-American man we saw with Foreman earlier.]

House: Snap, crackle, pop. Got some Rice Crispies in there?

Patient: That bad, huh?

House: You were here yesterday. I see from the chart that Dr. Foreman prescribed medicine, not a miracle. Got to give this stuff more than a day.

Patient: I didn’t fill that Oreo’s prescription.

House: On the theory that you didn’t trust him because he’s black…well, I’m going to prescribe the same medicine. See if you fill it this time.

Patient: I’m not buying into no racist drug, okay?

House: It’s racist because it helps black people more than white people? Well, on behalf of my peeps, let me say, thanks for dying on principle for us.

Patient: Look. My heart’s red, your heart’s red. And it don’t make no sense to give us different drugs.

House: You know, I have found a difference. Admittedly, it’s a limited sample, but it’s my experience in the last ninety seconds that all black people are morons. Sorry, African-Americans.

Patient: I’ll see another doctor.

House: Fine. Fine.

[House crumples the first prescription and writes another.]

House: I’ll give you the same medicine we give Republicans.

[House hands the prescription to the patient. Patient smiles and takes it.]

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Cameron is examining Alfredo’s hand.]

Alfredo: I think the medicine is working. There’s lighter, right?

Cameron: They don’t look lighter to me, Alfredo. How’s the tingling?

Alfredo: Not bothering.

Manny: Tell her the other thing.

[Alfredo shoots Manny a look and mutters something in Spanish. Manny answers in Spanish, insistent.]

Manny: He hasn’t peed since yesterday.

Cameron [concerned]: Since last night?

Manny: Afternoon.

Alfredo: It’s not a problem. I don’t drink much.

Cameron: I think we’ll give you a little rest from the meds here.

[Mother asks a question in Spanish. Cameron looks to Alfredo.]

Alfredo: She says that’s the medicine that’s supposed to cure me.

Cameron: I’m just making a little adjustment. Excuse me.

[Cameron leaves and walks out into:]

[Hall.]

[House stands outside the room and Cameron approaches him.]

Cameron: He’s not making any urine. I think we just destroyed the kid’s kidney with the amphotericin. I think he’s dying.

[Mother walks out of the room during Cameron’s admission.]

Mother: Dying?

House: Geez, it’s the cops.

[Mother starts crying and muttering in Spanish.]

House: Guess she understands a little English.

[Shoot of Alfredo’s room with his family by his side cuts to:]

[House’s office.]

[House, Cameron, Foreman, Chase, and Cuddy are reviewing Alfredo’s case.]

Cameron: His kidneys are shutting down due to direct toxicity to the proximal tubular epithelium.

Cuddy: Proof that my brilliant idea of giving him amphotericin is killing him.

House: That wasn’t a complete waste of time. His reaction shows that you don’t need to clean under your sink. It wasn’t aspergilllus.

Foreman: And blood cultures show he was negative for rat bite fever.

House: There’s still plenty of other cool pneumonias…

Foreman: Tested negative for Marcella, nocardia, crytococcus…

Chase: He has a low tider for chlamydia. Antibodies, maybe?

Foreman: No, no his chest x-ray’s all wrong for chlamydial pneumonia.

Chase: But the tider points to…

[House gets up and starts to walk away from the table.]

Cameron: He had an STD last year. That explains the tider. He has low sodium, maybe it’s legionella.

Chase: No, his antigen is negative.

House: Well, that all sucks…

Cuddy: Maybe we were right to begin with. His problems are all caused by DIC precipitated by falling off my roof.

Chase: DIC wouldn’t cause a fever this high.

House: See my lapdog agrees with me. How high?

Chase: Two hours ago, it was one-oh-three. With acetaminophen.

House: What onset abens ob-ay? Only temperature I’m interested in right now is his temperature right now.

[House walks out.]

[Alfredo’s room.]

[House enters, thermometer in hand. Manny is standing next to bed talking to Alfredo in Spanish.]

House: Open up.

[Alfredo says something in Spanish to Manny.]

House: Okay, let me clarify. Open up and keep it open.

[Alfredo and Manny exchange a few words in Spanish.]

Manny: Okay.

[Manny leaves.]

House: Under your tongue.

[Alfredo takes the thermometer with his left hand and places it under his tongue.]

House: You’re using your left hand. Right one hurt?

Alfredo: No, I feel better.

House: It really doesn’t hurt? Or you just figure if you no you’ll get out of the hospital sooner?

Alfredo [insistent]: Doesn’t hurt. Feels good.

[House sniffs.]

House: You don’t smell too hot.

[House grabs Alfredo’s right hand. Alfredo gasp, sits up, and drops the thermometer.]

House: Your hand is starting to rot.

[Stacy’s office.]

[House and Cuddy are standing in front of Stacy, who is seated at her desk.]

House: Why are we here?

Cuddy: We’re talking about cutting off a kid’s hand.

House: Yes, we’re talking about cutting it off, not subdividing it and putting in condos. It’s not a legal issue.

Cuddy: Are you being intentionally dense?

House: Huh?

Cuddy: I think it’s premature.

Stacy: I’ve heard enough.

House: What? She says one word and you take her side. You should wait until she at least gives a medical reason. Otherwise I might take it personally.

Stacy: Shut up. If I were to somehow find out that you two are in disagreement over the proper medical course of action, it could make it awkward for my client in court. My client being the two of you. So guys, I’m a little busy here. Why don’t we pick this conversation up in half an hour. K?

[Hallway outside Stacy’s office.]

Cuddy: All of his symptoms are caused by his underlying problem and the medicine we gave him.

House: What underlying problem? You have no idea what the underlying problem is.

Cuddy: You’re the diagnostician.

House: Fine. It’s all my fault. Does that make you feel better?

Cuddy: His hand still has an arterial pulse.

House: His hand is a cesspool. And the crap is spreading.

Cuddy: You are being pretty aggressive about destroying a man’s livelihood.

House: Don’t give a damn about his livelihood.

Cuddy: He lose that hand, he loses his job. All of his jobs. He’s not like us.

House: He can’t work as a cripple?

[Cuddy is shocked by that statement, but recovers.]

Cuddy: He loses his home, his kid brother drops out…

House: American dream destroyed. Very sad, very emotional. Not one medical fact in the whole pathetic tale. You’ve lost perspective, Cuddy. You’ve stopped looking at this as a doctor. You’re acting like someone who shoved somebody off their roof. You want to make things right? Too bad. Nothing’s ever right.

[Stacy’s office.]

House: I’m happy to report that we’re now so in synch we’re actually wearing each other’s underwear. Chop, chop time.

Stacy: Is this true?

House: No, I’m lying. Stupid to do with her in the room, I guess.

Stacy: This is a big decision.

House: We made it.

Stacy: We should convene in a meeting of the ethics committee.

House: NO! [throws hands up]. Look. She is making a medical decision based on never wanting to feel regret. You’re making a legal decision on wanting me to be wrong.

Stacy: Greg, you have a history of –

House: You wanted superficial agreement. You wanted everybody’s asses covered. You got it. Now can I do the surgery? Pretty, pretty please?

Stacy looks at Cuddy.

Stacy: Lisa? Are you sure you’re okay with this?

[Cuddy takes a second to reply.]

Cuddy: I should be the one to tell the family.

[Cuddy exits.]

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Alfredo’s mother is standing by his bedside as Cuddy speaks.]

Cuddy: Your hand is dying. The bacteria are eating it. When they run out of food there, they go somewhere else.

Alfredo: If you cut off my hand, I’ll be cured?

Cuddy: Unfortunately, no. We still have to find the disease that’s making you sick to begin with. But you won’t die of gangrene while we’re looking.

[Mother looks like she is going to cry,]

Alfredo: I quit school when I am twelve to get a job. To help my family. I know I never get a good job, never save money, or own my own house like you. But Manny, he’s smart. The best in his class.

Cuddy: Well, maybe Manny doesn’t have to quit school. Maybe you can…

[Alfredo shakes his head.]

Alfredo: Are you sure I need to do this?

Cuddy: Yes.

Alfredo: Okay. Okay.

[Alfredo’s room. Later.]

[Alfredo’s mother is singing to him in Spanish. Scene shifts to:]

[OR.]

[Alfredo is in surgery. Once again, Cuddy is watching. Mother’s singing can still be heard.]

[House’s office.]

[House is staring at the white board and twirling his cane. Foreman enters.]

Foreman: I gave one of my clinic patients a follow up call. Your name came up.

House: I’m guessing an old black guy that thinks the CIA invented rap music to made your people want to kill each other.

Foreman: He says you gave him the white folks’ stuff. This is exactly why black people don’t live as long.

House: This isn’t about race. Unless annoying is a race. Is he not getting better?

Foreman: He’s fine so far. I’m calling him back in. I’m getting him on the right stuff.

[Foreman starts to walk away.]

House: Oh, relax, Foreman. He already is.

[Foreman stops and turns, confused.]

House: I told him it was the white stuff. I gave him the black stuff.

Foreman [shaking his head]: He was right. You did exactly what white people do. You figure we don’t need to know the truth or can’t understand it. So you just lie to us.

House: It’s just a white lie.

Foreman: Good one, Master.

House: Right, I’m a racist. Too bad that idiot will never know for the rest of his long, long life.

Foreman: Every slave master thought they were doing the black man a favor. Negro can’t take care of himself, so we’ll put him to work. Give him four walls, a bed. We’ll civilize the heathen. I’ll tell you what. Stop don’t us favors. If you’re right and we end up back in the jungle with lousy blood pressure medicine, it won’t be on your head.

[Foreman leaves.]

[OR.]

[Alfredo’s surgery is in progress. They are about to detach the arm. Chase is present and notices something on the other hand. Cut to:]

[OR Observation Deck.]

[Cuddy still watches as the surgeons finally remove the hand. Stacy enters.]

Stacy: You okay?

[Cuddy looks at her, but doesn’t answer.]

Stacy: Wondering if you made the right call?

Cuddy: I wanted to be a doctor from the time I was twelve.

Stacy: I wanted to be a lawyer from the time I was six until my second week of law school. Sorry, your story.

Cuddy: I graduated medical school at 25, pissed off that I was second in my class. Chief of Medicine at 32. Second youngest ever, first woman.

Stacy: Sad story.

Cuddy: If I had been Alfredo’s doctor—

Stacy: You are his doctor.

Cuddy: I insisted on giving him Protein C. We had to cut his skull open. I insisted on amphotericin; killed his kidneys. I missed the pneumonia. Completely. I would have searched his house and ignored mine. I would have watched him die, trying to save his hand. [closes her eyes] Oh, if I didn’t have House looking over my shoulder…[she shakes her head]

Stacy: You say you’re not as good a doctor as House is?

Cuddy: I’m saying House is right. I’m so anxious to get ahead I haven’t been a doctor. In years.

[Chase enters.]

Chase: His middle finger is dusky.

Cuddy: Yeah, that’s why we’re doing this.

Chase: No, I mean the other hand. The one we haven’t chopped off yet.

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Alfredo is still getting worse and now has a pressurized oxygen mask attached to his face helping him breathe. Cuddy lifts his other hand. The last two little fingers are quickly turning dark.]

[Cuddy’s office.]

[Chase, Cameron, and Foreman are sitting around a small table. House is laying across a couch. Cuddy puts a piece of paper in front of Cameron.]

Cuddy: His O2 stats are down to eighty-eight. His lungs are giving out. He needs a ventilator.

[Cameron picks up the paper and looks at it.]

Cameron: And dialysis.

House: I’m getting distracted by the multi-system organ failure. Pinkies are supposed to be pink, right? They’re not called grayies.

Cuddy: But the organ failure is gonna kill him.

House: But the pinky is weirder…[sits up] What does it tell us?

Foreman: Same thing the right hand told us before we cut it off. It’s the same symptom.

House: But at a different time. His blood work indicates mild DIC. What if it’s mild in the way you get out of the ocean, the water clinging to your body makes the sea level drop. It’s technically true, but completely irrelevant.

Foreman: Well, the lack of DIC would explain everything if there were also a lack of anything to explain.

House: Endocarditis. His heart’s infected.

[CGI shot of Alfredo’s heart.]

House: Little bacteria cauliflowers clinging to his bowels. Except something they can’t hold on. They go swimming in his bloodstream. Thursday, one breaks off, goes to his right hand. Black fingers, gangrene. Friday’s child heads for the kidneys. We all know what Saturday’s are all about. Party with the left hand. Also explains the fever.

Cuddy: It’s perfect. Except for the little fact that we’re already tested for endocarditis and he was negative.

House: Which either means he is negative or what infection could cause pneumonia and culture negative endocarditis? Prize value goes down with every clue.

[House squawks like a bird twice.]

Chase: You’re thinking citicosis? Alfredo doesn’t have any pet parrots.

House: Which are squawking. Give him doxiciclean (?).

Cuddy: No! That will just make his clotting problem worse.

House: I liked you better when you were coming up with wacky drugs for us to try. We give him the doxeen now, damnit, maybe we can save his pinky. He can teach his brother how to count all the way to five.

Cameron: If you’re wrong, he’ll end up with no hands and no feet.

House: Technically, if I’m wrong, he’ll end up dead. But I take your point. What’s his night job?

Foreman: He cleans up at some fast food joint. Why? Do you think he got it from a chicken nugget?

House: Since when do fast food joints allow twelve year olds to mop floors?

Cuddy: Alfredo is twenty.

House: Really? Looks younger.

[Alfredo’s room.]

[Alfredo’s mother is sitting by his bedside. House enters. Cuddy is three steps behind him.]

House [to Alfredo]: Where were you going to work tonight?

[Alfredo can’t answer. He’s unconscious.]

House: What job do you do on Saturday nights?

[House opens a draw and pulls something out of it.]

Cuddy: What are you doing?

[House opens a syringe.]

House: Wake him up.

Cuddy: We just cut off his hand.

House: Yeah. We need to talk about it.

[Cuddy grabs the syringe.]

Cuddy: It’s not happening.

[House sighs and starts questioning the mother. In Spanish.]

House [to Cuddy]: Honest, I have no idea what I just said.

Cuddy: Why didn’t you say you spoke Spanish?

House: Well, because, she’d want to talk to me.

[House questions the mother again in Spanish.]

House [to Cuddy]: Or something like that.

[Mother answers.]

House: She says he doesn’t work Saturday nights. Give me the talking juice.

Cuddy: The fact it doesn’t fit your theory doesn’t make it a lie.

House: When she was out of the room, the kid brother insisted he was going to cover for Alfredo at work tonight.

[He asks the mother another question, yet again in Spanish. She answers and House doesn’t like the answer.]

House: Saturday nights he goes dancing. Either it’s a lie or he’s dancing with birds.

[House tries again to ask the Mother where Alfredo goes. She has no clue.]

House: Give her the talking juice.

Cuddy: She doesn’t know what you’re talking about.

House: Odds are, it’s going to be close to his house. Probably an abandoned warehouse or factory. Take the Scooby gang and spread out.

Cuddy: What the hell are we looking for?

House: Find somebody who looks like crap, tell him you want to place a bet.

[Cuddy turns back to bed.]

Cuddy: Ah…

House: Sayonara!

[Abandoned Warehouse.]

[There are a lot of people and Spanish music plays in the background. Cuddy and Foreman enter and find a ring and people holding fistfuls of cash. It’s a cockfight. Cuddy and Foreman exchange a look. Another minute passes when Cuddy spots Manny, picking up the dead chickens. Cuddy shakes his head and they leave.]

Wilson’s Office.

[House is tossing two balls into the air with one hand. Wilson sits in a chair. A cell phone rings. Wilson picks it up and looks.]

Wilson: It’s Cuddy.

[House takes it while still throwing the balls in the air.]

House: I already put him on the citicosis meds. Soon as you left. You’re welcome.

[He hangs up and stops tossing the balls.]

House: What do you think the record for one handed juggling is?

Wilson: You can yo-yo one handed.

House: Good point.

[House starts to juggle again – this time with both hands.]

[Alfredo’s room.]

Alfredo: I always wash my hands.

Cuddy: If a bird is infected, you can get citicosis just by breathing his dust.

Alfredo: Then why do I get sick and nobody else.

Cuddy: Your asthma made you venerable. You’re gonna be all right now.

Alfredo [softly]: Yes. Gracias.

[He lifts his left hand to shake Cuddy’s hand. Cuddy takes it and squeezes.]

Alfredo: For saving my life.

Cuddy’s office.

Cuddy: He thanked me.

Stacy: He should have.

Cuddy: We cut off his hand. If we’d figured it out earlier—

Stacy: If you figured it out later, he’d be dead.

Cuddy: I never figured it out at all.

[House enters.]

House: Hello.

Cuddy: What do you want House?

House: if you’re wallowing in self loathing, I’ve got something that might help.

[House takes out a bundle of papers.]

House: We’re getting sued.

Stacy [surprised]: You saved his life. He admitted that.

Cuddy: We’ll settle. He’s got a stub where his hand used to be. We have insurance. Case seems pretty solid to me.

House: Ca-ching. The new American dream. Happy ending. Kid’s gonna be just fine.

[House starts to leave, but pause just in front of the door. ]

House: Cuddy.

[He turns to face Cuddy again.]

House: Your guilt. It’s perverse, and it makes you a crappy doctor. It also makes you okay at what you do.

Cuddy: You figure a perverted sense of guilt makes me a good boss?

House: Now would the world be a better place if people never felt guilty? Makes sex better. [points to Stacy with his cane] Should have seen her in the last months of our relationship. Lot of guilt. Lot of screaming. I know this wasn’t just because it was your roof. Cuddy…you see the world as it is and you see the world as it could be. What you don’t see is what everybody else sees. The giant, gaping chasm in between.

Cuddy: House, I’m not naïve. I realize—

House: If you did, you never would have hired me.

[Cuddy doesn’t answer.]

House: You’re not happy unless things are just right. Which means two things. You’re a good boss. And you’ll never be happy.

[House starts to walk out again.]

House: By the way, why does everybody think you and I had sex? Think there could be something to it? I don’t know.

[House opens the door and leaves.]

House’s office.

[First shot is the exterior revealing a balcony, looking in at House and Wilson. It’s pouring.]

Wilson: Cuddy feels guilty about not diagnosing citicosis.

[Cut to inside the office. House is playing with a yo-yo.]

House: Think so?

Wilson: There’s no way she could have.

House: No. No way she could have.

[House turns and looks out the window.]

House: It’s raining.

Alfredo’s room.

[Alfredo lifts the stump where his hand used to be and touches it, thinking.]

Cuddy’s house.

[Rain drips from the roof and pounds the dining room table. Cuddy takes a pot from the kitchen and puts it under the drip before heading to bed.]


END

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Season 2 X 02 : Autopsy


Original Airdate: 9/20/2005
Written by: Lawrence Kaplow
Directed by: Deran Sarafian
Transcript by: Fen


BEGINNING

[A little girl is singing along with a tape player, the song is Beautiful sung by Christina Aguilera and the girl is giving it all she has. She is putting on a wig, taking her pills (lots of pills), preparing to give herself an injection. This is not a healthy little girl but she isn’t letting it get her down.]

Mom: 10-minute warning

Girl (Andie): I’m fine

Mom: What about your meds?

Girl (Andie): I got it mom.

[As she gives herself an injection everything seems to go crazy, the walls shake, the pipes burst, the music fades and the mirror shatters; bringing her back to reality. Mom rushes in and finds Andie standing in front of the shattered mirror, her hand bloody.]

[Cut to credits. Love the theme music]

[Opens on a closed elevator; we hear a sneeze as the doors open revealing… House.]

Wilson: House! Need you.

House: Uh uh, forget it. I’m going home.

Wilson: Hay fever?

House: Boy, you must be a doctor and everything!

Wilson: Two minutes.

House: No, the purple thingy on the file means that “whoever” is one of yours, which means cancer, which means no way is it two minutes.

Wilson: Fine, I’m lying. 30 minutes.

[House looks like he’s going to sneeze… and then doesn’t]

House: Mystery of life.

Wilson: Benadryl might help.

House: I already did 1000 milligrams. [He sneezes]

Wilson: Steam room?

House: Why Jimmy. We’ll talk about this in the morning.

Wilson: I’ve got a nine year old with cancer. Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma. Terminal kid trumps your stuffy nose.

House: Not yet.

Wilson: She’s hallucinating. [He said the magic word]

House: So the Rhabdo’s in her brain. Make her comfortable she’s got about a week.

Wilson: Yeah except there is no cancer in her brain. Pristine CT scan, blood tests, protein markers all negative.

House: The cancers in remission? Which means the hallucinations are unconnected.

Wilson: Fascinating huh? And not that it matters but if you fix whatever’s going on in her head you give her maybe another year. Long time for a nine year old.

House: No. It’ll just fly by.

[The ducklings are looking at Andie’s file in the office]

Cameron: Five major surgeries, a bone marrow transplant, 14 rounds of chemo and blast radiation.

Chase: If it was me I’d just stay home and watch TV or something. Not lie here under a microscope.

[A sneeze]

House: Don’t worry, anything happens to you nobodies is going to lift a finger. Differential diagnosis on your marks, get set…

Foreman: Hallucinations could be caused by…

House: Whoa. Wait for it… [Pause] and go.

Foreman: Latent neurotoxicity from the chemo treatments.

Cameron: No. The patient’s last round of chemo was two months ago. We would have seen it by now.

Chase: Genetic component.

Foreman: No, nothing on mom. Dad split when she was pregnant [ Cameron hands House a cup of tea] his medical history is also clean.

House: What a guy.

Chase: What about graft vs. host disease from the bone marrow transplant? Infection travels to her brain and she has hallucinations.

Foreman: Blood work and LP were clean.

House: [Looking at the scan] But where there’s infection there’s meningial swelling.

Foreman: That CT shows no meningial involvement.

House: True. Get a tox screen and MRI.

Foreman: We can do that if you what to ignore what we just discussed.

House: Sounds good.

Cameron: Toxic exposure doesn’t make chronological sense.

House: Yes, there is a third option she’s making it all up because she doesn’t want to get in trouble for breaking a mirror. Unfortunately we can’t test for that so… [He looks at Chase] Tox screen, MRI and you [He looks at Cameron] stay away from the patient.

Cameron: What’d I do?

HOUSE: Oh well, you’d just get all warm and cuddly around the dying girl and insinuate yourself; end up in a custody battle. Chase you handle the mom. Tell her that you’d just sit home and watch TV and die, but you’re going to go though the motions of trying to save her daughters life. It’s a doctor thing. [They begin to exit and he sips the tea] What the hell is this?

Cameron: Black walnut and ginger.

House: It’s nice.

[The MRI room]

Chase: Let’s lay you down and I’ll attach this thingamajiggy.

Andie: Sat monitor.

Chase: Oh, a pro. I don’t have to explain anything. I like it. [He’s prepping her and finds her central line]

Andie: Central line for the chemo.

Chase: Yeah. It doesn’t hurt or anything does it?

Andie: No it’s awesome. Instead of an IV; it saves me a lot of time and a bunch of needle sticks.

Chase: Don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone say they like the central line before. Alright, can I interest you in a walk in the park? [He turns on the wall monitor]

Andie: No thanks.

Chase: Okay. [He changes the image to a field of butterflies]

Andie: Don’t want any butterflies either; doesn’t matter what the walls look, like you’re still looking for cancer.

Chase: Not today. We’re looking for an infection, but I get your point. You comfortable?

Andie: Yep.

Chase: Alright let’s get this over with.

Andie: A pro. I like it.

[In the clinic]

House: Whoa look at the time I should have been out of here 20 minutes ago.

Nurse: You’ve only been here 20 minutes.

House: Can’t slip anything by you can I.

Nurse: There’s a patient in one.

House: I’m taking a sick day.

Cuddy: Take some Claritin.

House: Everyone’s a doctor suddenly.

Nurse: Patient in one requested a male doctor.

Cuddy: Balls are in your court, Doctor.

House: Union rules. I can’t check out this guy’s seeping gonorrhea this close to lunch.

Cuddy: Exam room one.

House: Its sexist and a very dangerous precedent; if people could choose the sex of their doctors you gals would be out business.

Cuddy: Exam room one.

[Exam room one]

House: sore throat? [We see the patient holding an open book in front of him, he removes it to reveal blood stained pants] It’s not Lupis. Well not everyone can operate a zipper; the up, the down. What comes next?

Patient: My new girl friend never been with a guy who wasn’t c-circumcised so she freaked and—

House: Aha, and you wanted Rivkah to feel all gemutlicht. I get it it’s a shandah.

[The patient drops his pants as House turn toward him] Gah!

Patient: I got some box cutters and uh…

House: Just like Abraham did it.

Patient: I sterilized them which, uh, I was told you’re…

House: Stop talking. I’m going to get a plastic surgeon. Get the Twinkie back in the wrapper.

Foreman: House. Hey, house. Andie’s MRI and tox screen were clean. No infection. No neurotoxins.

[House hands his bag and tosses his cane to Cameron then takes the test results]

House: Oxygen saturation is 94%, check her heart.

Foreman: Her oxygen saturation is normal.

House: It’s off by one percentage point.

Foreman: It’s within range. It’s normal.

House: If her DNA was off by one percentage point she’d be a dolphin. We’ve got a patient, who for no obvious reason is hallucinating. Since it’s not obvious, I thought we’d go with subtle.

Cameron: It doesn’t matter if her sat percentage is off that means her blood isn’t getting enough oxygen. That’s a problem with her lungs not her heart

Foreman: A lung problem isn’t causing hallucinations.

Chase: But the lungs could lead us somewhere that is.

House: Welcome to the end of the thought process.

Chase: Primary pulmonary hypertension.

Cameron: Maybe PE or pulmonary fibrosis.

Foreman: Could be some bizarre case of kyphoscoliosis. [Chase laughs]

House: I’m going home. While I’m resting you guys get some arterial blood gasses. Once you confirm she is hypoxic I want a plethysmography, Chest X-ray, CT and VQ. And if all that comes back negative then snake a catheter into her lungs. Don’t worry, I don’t sleep in. I’ll get bagels.

[In the test lab]

Chase: you ever had this test before? [Andi shakes her head]

Andi: What’s it for?

Chase: This goes all the way up the vein by your hip into your lung. If I find something up there blocking anything I pull it out. Simple.

Andie: Its gonna be easy. The doctor at Sloan told me I have a great aorta.

Chase: Oh, you have had this test before.

Andie: Sorry. I just like hearing you talk.

[Chase laughs and goes back to work]

Andie: I’ve never kissed a boy.

Chase: There’s time yet for that.

Andie: There was a boy last summer; I was at one of those cancer camps.

Chase: Uh huh.

Andie: I just never had the guts to ask him. You know there’s a good chance I’m not going to walk out of this hospital. Even if I do I’m nine. There’s not a lot of kissing going on in the third grade.

Chase: You will walk out of here, alright, and you will kiss a boy. There you go. Smile.

Andie: Will you kiss me?

Chase: No.

Andie: No one will ever know.

Chase: I’m… I’m… I’m sorry I can’t.

Andie: I won’t tell anyone.

Chase: Listen, you’re nine years old I’m thirty.

Andie: I just want to know what it feels like. Once.

Chase: This isn’t your last chance for that.

Andie: What if it is? Please kiss me.

[After a moment he kisses her and immediately feels like a big perv]

[Commercial break... buy stuff]

[In the office]

House: Bagels.

Foreman: You didn’t sleep in.

House: Didn’t sleep. Didn’t breathe. I’m dying.

Chase: Pulmonary angiogram of Andie’s lungs was clean. Arterial blood gasses and a CT scan were also normal. Her heart and lungs are fine.

House: Which gives us no explanation for the diminished sat percentage.

Foreman: Oddly enough sometimes normal is normal.

House: Sometime we can’t see why normal isn’t normal. Get her symptoms on the board.

Cameron: Whoa; you’re letting me touch the markers?

House: It’s written down in my advanced health care directive, should I be incapacitated in any way you run the board, then Foreman. Chase you’re just not ready yet. What else?

Foreman: Guys, I know we ruled out infection but if we forget the labs for a minute, there is one infection we didn’t test for because of her age. Neurosyphilis.

Chase: There’s no way.

Foreman: If the infection dipped into her cerebral cortex all peripheral functions could be compromised.

Chase: She hasn’t had sex, she’s nine!

Foreman: Maybe it wasn’t her idea. I mean she’s been around a lot of adults; all the hospital visits the counselors at the cancer camps.

Cameron: You think she’s been molested.

Chase: She’s hiding it pretty well if there’s any of that going on.

House: Yeah, all girls who’ve been molested want to talk about it. Break out the rape kit.

Chase: She hasn’t had sex.

House: Why are you so sure?

Chase: She told me she’d never kissed a boy.

House: You read her diary too?

Chase: She asked me to kiss her.

House: I rest my case. A regular nine year old girl does not have sex on the brain, not when a doctor is threading a catheter through her vein.

Chase: She’s not a regular nine year old. She’s got terminal cancer.

House: Cancer doesn’t make you special. Molestation on the other hand…

Chase: She wanted one kiss before she dies. If she’s never kissed a boy it’s a fair bet she’s never had sex.

House: Tell that to all the hookers who won’t kiss me on the mouth. Hey, here’s a theory, she has been molested, seeks refuge in romantic fantasies with older men with great hair. And I think you missed the punch line, victims of molestation learn to work the angles. Manipulate people. You did it didn’t you. You kissed her.

Chase: It wasn’t sick. [Foreman and Cameron freak out quietly] It was one kiss for a dying girl. One small… one small kiss before she dies. Thank you. Thanks.

House: This is why you can’t touch my markers. Go see if she’s had sex.

Cameron: Okay.

[Exam room]

Andie: No ones ever touched me.

Cameron: We just need to be sure.

Andie: I like your hair. I used to have really curly hair. I always wanted it to be like yours is.

Cameron: Thank you. Alright, that’s it, you’re fine.

[House throws a pebble at Wilson’s office window, and then another until his friend looks up]

Wilson: With a patient.

House: She dying?

Wilson: No.

House: Then she can wait.

Wilson: Would you excuse me, just 2 minutes.

House: If only she’d been molested then we’d have something to go on. [He tries to open a jar of mentholatum] No forced entry.

Wilson: One hallucination; maybe it was just bad pork, maybe there’s nothing…

House: She’s not fine. Her sat percentage dropped another point.

[He keeps struggling with the jar]

Wilson: Which could suggest a tumor in her lung.

House: Lung wouldn’t explain the hallucination. CT scan showed both lungs were clean, which means there’s a tumor in her heart.

Wilson: Not a chance. Give me that.

[Wilson opens the jar]

House: I loosened it.

Wilson: I opened it. We have an MRI and an echo of her heart, there’s nothing there.

House: Give me one other explanation for low ox sat.

Wilson: I can’t. There’s only one condition that simultaneously affects the heart and the brain but she…

House: Perfect let’s go with that.

Wilson: Tuberous Sclerosis in a kid that also has Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma. Two different unrelated cancers at the same time is a statistical no no.

House: What’s the rate of cancer in the general population? 1 in 10,000?

Wilson: Don’t, don’t start with the numbers.

House: The way I figure it 1 in 10,000 of them should have another cancer. Little girl won the lottery twice. It happens.

Wilson: So you’re going to cut her open?

House: Exploratory surgery, gotta find this thing.

Wilson: You’re just going to grope around inside an immuno-compromised nine year old she could die on the table.

House: I know its somewhere near the heart.

Wilson: House, you’ve gotta do better than that.

[House is listening to Italian opera in the locker room]

Foreman: Why are we here?

House: Better acoustics. Now listen to this.

Chase: That’s a mitral heart valve.

House: No, get the wax out of your ears. This is the patient’s aortic valve. I downloaded the audio of her echocardiogram.

Foreman: What are we trying to hear?

House: Tumor.

Chase: They tend to keep quiet on account of them not having any mouths.

House: But we could hear an abnormality in the sound of the valve, which would indicate the presence of something; a tumor for example. If we can tell the surgeon where to look this is no longer exploratory surgery it’s a precision strike.

Foreman: Her aortic valve sounds normal.

House: Too bad. Now listen to the dulcet tones of Andie’s tricuspid valve.

Cameron: Normal.

House: And this is her mitral valve.

Chase: I don’t hear anything weird.

House: Oh you guys make me sad. Listen again.

Chase: She’s had one hallucination. Why are we operating on her? Why are we risking her life?

House: Because Wilson thinks it’ll be nice to give the girl a year to say good bye to her mommy. I guess maybe she stutters or something. Now shut up and listen. Tricuspid. Mitral. Again.

Cameron: Wait. There. There’s an extra flap.

House: I’m gonna ask the surgeon to look at the mitral valve first. Chase, I want you there. I don’t like reading surgeons reports, they’re boring.

Chase: I’m not really sure I should be spending more…

House: She’ll be unconscious you’ll be safe.

[They leave and House goes back to the opera]

Mom: I’ll be there when you wake up.

Andie: I’m going to be fine mom.

Wilson: Brave kid, she even gave her mom a pep talk.

House: Sure. Brave. She’s a wonder.

Wilson: What’s your problem?

House: These cancer kids; you can’t put them all on a pedestal. It’s basic statistics some of them have to be whiny little fraidy cats.

Wilson: You’re unbelievable.

House: If there’s not one yellow-belly in the group then being brave doesn’t have any meaning.

Wilson: Andie handles an impossible situation with grace. That’s not to be admired?

House: You see grace because you want to see grace.

Wilson: You don’t see grace because you won’t go anywhere near her.

House: Idolizing is pathological with you people. You see things to admire where there’s nothing.

Wilson: Yeah, well, we’re evil.

House: You find things to admire where you shouldn’t be sniffing at all; like Debbie in accounting.

Wilson: She’s nice.

House: You shouldn’t know that, you’re married.

Wilson: So the little kid dying of cancer, I shouldn’t like her?

House: If you’re dying suddenly everybody loves you.

Wilson: You have a cane, nobody even likes you.

House: I’m not terminal, merely pathetic; you wouldn’t believe the crap people let me get away with.

[Wilson watches the surgery from the viewing area. Mom waits alone. Chase looks up and shakes his head. They’ve found it.]

Wilson: They found a tumor it’s in her lung extending into her heart. It wasn’t visible on the MRI because it’s growing along the heart wall. Now because of the placement, the surgeon has to temporarily remove Andie’s heart. It’s called an x-plant. They cut out the tumor and replace any damaged heart muscle with bovine patches. That’s a patch made from cow’s pericardium. It’s the sack that encloses the heart.

Mom: what are her chances?

Wilson: The problem is there might not be enough heart left once they remove all of the tumor. And if the tumor’s metastasized there nothing we can do.

[Chase is giving the girl eye drops and notices something]

Chase: Dr. Murphy.

Murphy: Just let me tie this off.

Chase: Doctor.

Murphy: What?

Chase: She’s got a bleed in her eye.

[Commercials again… Buy more stuff]

House: Well they got the tumor. Repaired her heart but she bled out of her eye.

Wilson: Well she didn’t bleed out of her eye from a heart tumor.

House: True. Cardiac tumor was benign.

Wilson: That’s impossible.

House: Statistically.

Wilson: Oh shut up. If the tumor’s benign that means it didn’t cause her hallucinations.

House: That’s why I’m mentioning it.

Wilson: So the tumor is a coincidence.

House: This is bad you’re starting to state the obvious.

Wilson: No, you said it would be there, it was there. It can’t be a coincidence.

[They enter the office]

House: A nine year old with terminal cancer gets an unrelated benign tumor growing in her heart why?

Cameron: It’s benign? That’s impossible.

House: Talk to Wilson.

Wilson: And the retinal bleed? Another coincidence?

Chase: A clot could create pressure behind the eye cause the bleed.

Wilson: A clot could explain the eye, but doesn’t explain the hallucinations.

Foreman: A clot could cause mini seizures.

Wilson: Great; another thing that’s not causing the hallucinations.

Foreman: Post seizure psychosis; the brain sort of corrects itself after the seizure by hallucinating.

Wilson: The clot could explain the eye and the hallucinations, but what about the tumor. Tumors the size of an octopus wrapped around a little girls heart are not just a coincidence.

Cameron: She’s not healthy. She’s never been healthy.

Wilson: What’s the theory here? This girl’s body’s a lemon? Faulty manufacturing? Everything’s falling apart.

House: The tumor is Afghanistan the clot is Buffalo. Does that need more explanation? Ok the tumor is Al Qaeda. Big bad guy with brains. We went in and wiped it out but it had already sent out a splinter cell; a small team of low level terrorists quietly living in some suburb of buffalo, waiting to kill us all.

Foreman: Whoa, whoa, you’re trying to say that the tumor threw a clot before we removed it.

House: It was an excellent metaphor angio her brain for this clot before it straps on an explosive vest.

[Cameron and Foreman angio the brain]

House: Angio was clean.

Wilson: There’s no clot?

House: There’s a clot, we just can’t find it.

Wilson: We can’t do exploratory surgery on her brain.

House: Are you sure you’re not a neurologist?

Wilson: [Sighs] Okay, she’s going to die.

House: Well the clots not gonna to go away quietly. It could blow at anytime. Are you going to let them know?

Wilson: I guess so

House: Can I come with?

Wilson: To tell Andie she’s going to die? That’s very un-you.

House: Well, she’s such a brave girl. I want to see how brave she is when you tell her she’s going to die.

Wilson: Go to hell.

House watches Wilson tell Andie and her mom from a distance. Mom cries and the girl comforts her. Wilson looks at house

[In the office]

House: what would you do if you were told you were gonna die?

Foreman: I don’t know, I’d be devastated.

House: You’d cry like a baby, everybody would, but she’s not doing anything. She’s a rock.

Cameron: She’s brave.

House: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Why?

Chase: She’s gone through more than most people do in a lifetime.

House: So what? Does that mean she’s ready to die? What if her bravery is a symptom?

The clot is causing hallucinations and messing with her emotions.

Foreman: You think her bravery is chemically based.

House: Would tell us where to look for the clot. Where’s the fears center?

Foreman: The amygdala in the hippocampus; it’s a big area and a busy one. You blindly cut in there you’ll kill her. The only time you’re going to see this clot is at autopsy.

[Light bulb moment]

House: Then let’s do that.

[Cuddy’s office]

House: Is it still illegal to perform an autopsy on a living person?

Cuddy: Are you high?

House: If it’s Tuesday, I’m wasted.

Cuddy: It’s Wednesday.

House: I want to induce a hypothermic cardiac arrest. Once the patients on bypass we siphon off two liters of blood then perfuse the brain while she’s in an MRI.

Cuddy: You’re actually talking about killing her.

House: Just for a little while, I’ll bring her right back.

Cuddy: Oh, well, in that case go ahead. Why are even talking?

House: If we do nothing she’s dead in a day, maybe a week; the kind that lasts.

Cuddy: We need FDA approval for any surgical technique used for diagnostic purposes.

House: Absolutely. If we were doing anything invasive; but there’s nothing invasive. [He almost sneezes] Gah. You know, I’m not cutting into her head I’m just looking for a clot.

Cuddy: Not invasive? You’re killing her.

House: Don’t split hairs, if it works she lives.

Cuddy: Make sure the mom understands that this is a million to one shot.

House: I’ll see that Wilson passes that along.

Wilson: The plan is basically to... reboot your daughter. Like a computer. We shut her down and restart her.

Mom: How do you restart a nine year old girl?

Wilson: We cool her core body temperature to 21 degrees Celsius. Use blankets. Ice.

Mom: Sort of like… like hibernation?

Wilson: Not quite, in hibernation the bears’ heart beat is just very slow; in cardiac arrest there is no heart beat.

Mom: So she’s dead.

Wilson: Temporarily yes. By cooling her we limit the risk of damage when we remove her blood. Not all of it, two to three liters.

Mom: Half her blood.

Wilson: Then we put it back. It’s called perfusing the circuit. In this case her brain, and using an MRI we’d have a very brief window to, hopefully, see the outline of the clot. If its there and if it’s operable, we go get it. And Andie walks out of here.

[House is playing with a card in his office]

Wilson: Signed consent forms.

House: Great. Thanks.

Wilson: You sound better.

House: I stacked a combo of mentholatum, a few vicodin and something else which I can’t remember. Should be able to ride the high for a couple hours; what did Andie say?

Wilson: About what?

House: About this.

Wilson: I didn’t talk to her; she doesn’t need to know the specifics of this procedure.

House: What if you’re right about her? What if she just is that brave?

Wilson: That doesn’t mean she’s mature enough to handle this kind of decision.

House: Either she understands or she’s not brave. You can’t have it both ways. If she does understand… then she deserves to know what’s going on.

[Andie’s room]

House: I’m doctor House.

Andie: I’ve seen you around.

House: Did your mom tell you what we’re gonna try?

Andie: Sorta.

House: Tomorrows test could take ten hours, in your present condition you might not even make it through.

Andie: My mom’s done a lot of research.

House: How do you feel about it? If we figured maturity came from how much time you’ve got left instead how long you’ve been here this would be your call.

Andie: I don’t have a choice right?

House: I could give you one.

Andie: I wanna get better.

House: You’ve got cancer. Even if I fix this…

Andie: I’ve got a year.

House: A year of this. A lot of people wouldn’t want that. A lot of people would just want it to be over.

Andie: Are you asking if I want to die?

House: Nobody wants to die. But you’re going to. The question is how, how much you’re going to suffer and how long. I’m asking if you want this to be over.

Andie: What would you tell my mom?

House: I could give her ten excellent medical reasons why we can’t do this procedure.

Andie: I can’t just leave her cause I’m tired.

House: But you can’t stay for her either.

Andie: But she needs me here.

House: This is your life, you can’t do this just for her.

Andie: I love her.

[Commercials... go see movies]

[Operating room]

HOUSE: Thank you for joining me for tonight’s dress rehearsal. Playing the part of Andie is Morty Randolph. [He gestures at a cadaver] For his donation to science we give our thanks. Once Andie is cool and goes off bypass we have 60 seconds to get 2 liters of blood out of her body and back into her for the pictures to find the clot in her head. IF our star is bumped tomorrow [He barely touches the cadaver and lights start to flash] while my MRI is on these red lights will go off which will mean we have no useable test results. No test results; its goodbye Broadway. You guys will be wearing bad cat suits in Des Moines. Neurosurgeons here, with a view of the monitors. Cardiac surgeon there, in case we need to open her up. Anesthesiologists, one by the cardiac bypass machine, one by the cooling apparatus. Girls in the chorus if you’re over 5’ 10” stick with me. Okay give me 60 seconds on the clock. Showtime. A five, six, seven, eight… siphon off the blood through the arterial line WHOOSH, sound of blood draining. More whoosh. Glug, glug, glug and we… [Red lights] Kill her. Again.

[Red lights]

Doctor 1: Sorry, my hand slipped.

House: How hard can this be?

Doctor 2: It’s a little busy down here.

House: Again!

[Red lights]

Doctor 2: If we didn’t have to lavage her gastrointestinal…

House: Again!

[Red lights]

House: Again!

Foreman: We could bolt her to the table.

House: Gruesome and low tech. Kiss me I love it. A five, six, seven, eight…

[Fade to Andie on the operating table]

Nurse: Here you go doctor.

House: This’ll make you sleep.

Andie: A lot of people.

House: Big musical number kiddo; a lot of people here to make you look good.

Andie: You’re kind of freaking me out.

Chase: He gets that sometimes.

Anesthesiologist 1: Deep breath honey.

House: Okay go.

[Big scary procedure as described previously by Wilson. With the added task of Foreman bolting the girls head to the table]

Anesthesiologist 1: Body temperature, 37 degrees Celsius.

House: Start the cooling. You. Go.

Chase: She’s shivering.

House: 200 milligrams of vicuronium.

Anesthesiologist 1: 24 degrees Celsius.

Doctor 1: We have A-phib.

[House turns off the monitor volume]

House: What? She’s dead; that’s the whole idea. Go.

Anesthesiologist 2: 1 liter out… 2 liters.

House: Put the blood back in; reperfuse the circuit.

[MRI starts to appear on the monitors]

House: Anything people? Anything at all?

Neuro 1: Internal carotid artery and cavernous sinus is fine.

Doctor 1: 10 seconds.

Foreman: Vestibulocolcular nerve intact.

Neuro 2: Middle meningial artery clear.

Doctor 1: 5 seconds.

Neuro 1: Nothing.

Doctor 1: We’re over the limit. We’ve got to start re-warming her or there’ll be permanent damage.

House: Keep looking.

Foreman: There!

Neuro 2: I didn’t see anything.

Foreman: It was there.

House: Are you sure?

Foreman: 4 millimeters lateral to the hippocampus. I saw it.

Doctor 1: House, she’s out of time; she’s gonna be a vegetable.

Foreman: I saw it.

House: That’s good enough for me.

[Waiting room]

Wilson: They were able to restart her heart. She’s doing as well as can be hoped.

Mom: So they found they clot.

Wilson: We think so. The neurosurgeons are attempting to remove it right now.

Mom: And when will we know if there was any damage?

Wilson: A few hours.

[Mom cries]

[Music montage: Bird York –In the Deep]

[House is playing with a ball in his office… waiting]

[Foreman is in the operating room]

Foreman: 4 millimeters lateral to the hippocampus.

Neuro: That’s where I am. There’s nothing there.

Foreman: You’re not there yet. Keep going.

Neuro: I’m there. Are you sure you saw... there it is. I think I can get it.

[Foreman turns to Chase who is watching from outside]

Andie: Hi Mom.

Mom: Ohh, hi baby. [She cries]

[House is in his office… cutting a white powder on a mirror using a razor blade]

Wilson: You’re treating your stuffy nose with cocaine?

House: Diphenhydramine. Antihistamine. New delivery system; it’s a blood brain barrier thing.

Wilson: So it’s all about speed isn’t it. One thing to another; never standing still. You’re pretty good at that.

House: I know my way around a razor blade.

Wilson: Its time.

House: just a couple more rocks.

Wilson: Andie’s going home.

House: Right; parade of the small bald circus freaks. Sorry, I got a thing.

Wilson: I read the surgeons report.

House: Oh?

Wilson: Clot was no where near her amygdala. Means her fear emotions were working perfectly.

House: Yeah.

Wilson: Yeah. So her bravery was not a symptom.

House: Yeah. I was wrong; she genuinely is a self sacrificing saint whose life will bring her nothing but pain, which she will stoically withstand just so that her mom doesn’t have to cry quite so soon. I’m beside myself with joy. [He does a line] Whoa!

Wilson: She enjoys life more than you do.

House: Right.

Wilson: She stole tat kiss from Chase. What have done lately?

House: I’m pacing myself; unlike her I have the luxury of time.

Wilson: She could outlive you.

[Andie hugs everyone goodbye in turn; Cuddy, Cameron, Foreman, Wilson]

Chase: [Handing her tickets to the American Museum of Natural History] Incase you want to see real butterflies. [They hug and she kisses him on the cheek]

House: I’m not gonna kiss you no matter what you say. [She hugs him]

Andie: It’s sunny outside, you should go for a walk.

House: Yeah. [He looks at his cane] I’m not much for long walks in the park. Now get.

[Closes the way it opened with Beautiful. Sung this time by Elvis Costello]

[House stands on the street looking at some motorcycles, a guy is talking to him but he doesn’t hear it because the song is actually playing on his head phones]

Salesman: Right leg?

[House removes the headphones]

House: Huh?

Salesman: Your right leg? You can still ride. We’ve got excellent financing right now. It lists for 10-8 but I’ll let you steal it out the door for 10-3.

House: No thanks. [He starts to leave and then turns back] Could I test drive one of these things?

[Fade out on House: riding the open road]


END

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Season 2 X 01 : Acceptance


Original Airdate: 9/13/2005
Written by: Russel Friend & Garret Lerner
Directed by: Daniel Attias
Transcript by: Mari


BEGINNING

[Opens in a prison, on death row.]

Inmate: Deep fried shrimp, and lobster. Never had lobster. What, do you boil ‘em or grill ‘em? Which one’sbetter? Ah, just get ‘em both. And I know I need a strawberry malt, and then there’s those chocolate donuts thatcome in a box?

Lawyer: We’ll do our best to accommodate. Tomorrow you’ll be moved to a holding cell. That’s where you’llget your last meal. [Close up on other Inmate… let’s call him Clarence.] You also have a constitutional rightto the spiritual advisor of your choice.

Inmate: Naw, I don’t need none of that.

Lawyer: One last thing to think about: After I read the execution warrant, you’ll be given an opportunity to makea statement. You might want to take some time and think about what you want to say as your final words. [He leaves.]

Inmate: Yo, Clarence! You hear that? A spiritual advisor of my choice!

Clarence: Don’t matter, you goin’ to hell anyway.

Inmate: You think I’ll get another stay?

Clarence: You should. Supreme Court say it ain’t right to kill retards.

Warden: Cut the chatter! Exercise time. [The guards come and take Clarence into a room with no windows, only a basketballhoop. They release him from his handcuffs through a hole in the door.] Be back in an hour. Enjoy. [Clarence walks around,and then pretends to shoot some hoops. Suddenly, a woman appears in the room.]

Woman: Why did you hit me so many times, Clarence?

Clarence: You know why!

Woman: You could have stopped. [Another person appears.]

Man: You stabbed me in the back, man.

Clarence: I never st –

Man: You couldn’t fight fair.

Clarence: Like you did? [A guard appears.]

Guard: I had a wife and three kids.

Clarence: You are a sick bastard! Open the door! Open the door! [Another man appears.]

Man #2: Hey! What’d I ever do to you, man? [The voices continue as the figures close in on Clarence. He gets to hisknees. CGI shot into his chest of his heart, which starts to beat at an abnormally fast rate, until he collapses on the ground.]

[Opening credits!]

[Cut to House, walking toward Cuddy’s office. He sees Stacy talking with her, and pops a Vicodin. He walks in, and--]

James: You can’t go in there.

House: Who are you, and why are you wearing a tie?

James: I’m Dr. Cuddy’s new assistant. Can I tell her what it’s regarding?

House: Yes. I would like to know why she gets a secretary and I don’t.

James: I’m her assistant, not her secretary. I graduated from Rutgers.

House: Hmm. I didn’t know they had a secretarial school. Well, I hope you took some classes in sexual harassmentlaw. Does the word "ka-ching" mean anything to you? I’m going in now. [House enters.]

Cuddy: Dr. House, we are in the middle of a meeting.

House: What’s with hiring a male secretary? J-Date not working out?

Stacy: He is cute. Be careful.

House: She’s not like you. She can’t just walk into a bar and pick up her soul mate in twenty minutes.

Stacy: I met Mark at a fundraiser that happened to be held at a –

House: You met me at a strip club.

Stacy: You were the worst two dollars I ever spent. [to Cuddy] We’ll catch up later.

Cuddy: Stacy, it’s House. I know you can handle it.

Stacy: Nothing to handle. It’s obvious he wants to talk to you alone. [She leaves.]

Cuddy: If you have a problem working with Stacy you should have said so.

House: What was I supposed to do? Ask her to leave? That’s just rude. Death row guy. I want the case.

Cuddy: How do you even know about him? You don’t have access to the hospital’s mainframe.

House: No, but "partypants" does.

Cuddy: You stole my password?

House: Hardly counts as stealing; it’s a pretty obvious choice.

Cuddy: Well, I have already assigned Death Row Guy to Dr. Nolo.

House: Nolo? Well, I don’t want to say anything bad about another doctor… especially a useless drunk…

Cuddy: You are addicted to pain pills.

House: But I’m not useless. Tell Nolo I’m talking over.

Cuddy: Dr. Nolo is a board certified cardiologist.

House: Oh, good. I’m sure he’ll explore all the usual options for why a guy’s heart starts beating sofast it pumps out air instead of blood. Wait a second – there are no usual options!

Cuddy: How badly do you want this?

House: I will give you two more clinic hours this week.

Cuddy: Don’t bend over for the soap. [She hands him the file.]

[Cut to House in the hospital lobby, the Ducklings behind him.

Cameron: Just the heart, or the patient have any other complaints?

House: The patient’s not talking to anybody.

Cameron: Where are we going?

House: You are going to the clinic for two hours.

Cameron: Me? Why?

House: Talk to Cuddy. She’s got me going to Mercer State Prison, Capital Sentences unit, I don’t know.

Foreman: Aren’t there better ways to spend our time?

House: Good question. What makes a person deserving? Is a man who cheats on his wife more deserving than a man who killshis wife?

Foreman: Uh… yeah. Actually, he is.

House: What about a child molester? Certainly not a good guy, but he didn’t kill anybody. Maybe he can get antibiotics,but no MRIs. What about you? What medical care should you be denied for being a car thief? Tell you what: the three of youwork out a list of what medical treatments a person loses based on the crime they committed. I’ll review it when I getback. [House leaves the hospital. Chase and Foreman exit the lobby, which leaves Cameron to do the clinic hours.]

[Cut to the prison.]

Warden: Your patient shanked one inmate his first month here, broke another one’s neck, nearly decapitated one ofmy guards…

House: Relax, I’ve got a great bedside manner.

Warden: Too dangerous to house him in the infirmary. You don’t have to worry, we’ve taken every precaution.I’ve had my men clear from the cell all pens, paperclips and staplers. Any supplies that might be used as a weapon.[We see Clarence, shackled to a cot in a cell full of office supplies.] Open her up! For your visit, we’ve got him cuffedand shackled.

House: And yet, you’re staying out there.

Warden: [nodding, then grabbing House’s cane] Uhp! You’re going to have to give me that. Wouldn’t wantanybody to get hurt.

[Cut to the clinic, where a woman is sitting in an exam room.]

Cameron: [entering] Hi.

Cindy: Hi.

Cameron: I’m Dr. Cameron. How’re you feeling?

Cindy: Eh. Little cough, no big deal.

Cameron: Okay, then. What’re you doing here?

Cindy: I just got a job at the university. They need a health clearance. Apparently I’m a little anemic, so theymade me get some more tests.

Cameron: Any family history of anemia?

Cindy: Not that I know of. My mom died of cancer when I was a kid, my dad’s heart gave out a couple of years ago.

Cameron: Brothers and sisters?

Cindy: I’m afraid it’s a short family history. That’s it. I had a husband once, but… didn’tstick. My tests should be back, probably in that file.

Cameron: Probably. [She looks at the lung x-ray, and then looks concerned.]

Cindy: Is everything okay?

[Cut to Dr. Wilson, looking at the x-ray in his office.]

Wilson: Did you redo the x-ray?

Cameron: Twice.

Wilson: Well, you don’t need a consult. You know the diagnosis.

Cameron: All she has is a cough.

[Cut to House, examining Clarence. He shines a light in his eyes, and then looks at his hands.]

House: Bluish tinge to the fingernails, lips… he’s hypoxic.

Warden: What’s that mean?

House: He’s not getting enough oxygen. You know how people can you can’t live without love? Well, oxygen’seven more important. He’s got fluid in his lungs, breathing rate of 50… he needs to be intubated and put on arespirator.

Warden: Don’t have a respirator.

House: Better get one in about an hour, or you’re gonna lose him.

Warden: I’ll make out a requisition. The state’s already sentenced this man to die.

House: [flipping open his cell phone] I think the state was a tad more specific about "how". [on the phone] This is Dr.Gregory House. I need an ambulance to pick-up at Mercer State Prison.

Warden: Wasted call, my men will stop them at the gate. No way a Death Row inmate leaves my prison, least not through thefront doors.

[Cut to House, walking out of the hospital elevator with Clarence tied to a gurney, paramedics, and a lot of guards.]

House: You work fast.

Stacy: So do you.

House: Is that a shock?

Stacy: Yeah. It was easy once I convinced the clerk to take it to Judge Markem, he’s a sucker for Eight Amendmentarguments.

House: Stop, I’m getting turned on.

Cuddy: House!

House: [in his best Scooby-Doo imitation] Ruh-roh!

Cuddy: It was just a consult? Did you expect us to shut down an entire floor for this guy?

House: Did you do something to your hair?

Stacy: You said you cleared it with her –

House: Come on. You’ve known me how long and you still don’t know when I’m joshin’ ya?

Cuddy: Take him back to prison. Now.

House: Can’t. Ironically, I’m bound by this court order which your ace attorney got. I have to make him allbetter before shipping him back for the state to kill him. Is it just me, or is that weird? Anyway, we’re walking.

[Cut to Cameron entering House’s office. House is staring at a file in his hand.]

House: Somebody left this on my chair. Clever - forces me to either deal with the file or never sit down again.

Cameron: Cindy Kramer. I told her you’d see her.

House: You shouldn’t have told her that. She’s got metastatic squamous cell lung cancer, six months, tops.

Cameron: Have you even looked at the x-ray?

House: No, just guessing. It’s a new game. If it’s wrong, she gets a stuffed bear.

Cameron: A spot on a x-ray doesn’t necessarily mean that she’s terminal.

House: I love children. So filled with hope.

Cameron: It could be pneumonia. It could be sarcoidosis.

House: Could be, if she didn’t already have swollen hilar lymph nodes on the other lung.

Cameron: Could we at least brainstorm for other ideas? [He takes the x-ray and puts it up on the light board.] Thank you.[He begins to write on the board.] I still think it could be pneumonia and sarcoidosis, but we should check for tuberculosisand definitely rule out congestive heart failure. [She looks to see that House has written "denial, anger, bargaining, depression,acceptance" on the board.] The five stages of dying.

House: Exactly. Personally, I think it’s all just new-age crap, but from your tear-filled, puppy-dog eyes I thinkI’ve made my point. Now go tell Cindy whatever-her-name-is that she’s dying. [He walks into Diagnostics, whereChase and Foreman are sitting.] Tachycardia, pulmonary edema, likely suspects?

Cameron: [following him in] The Death Row guy? That’s who you’re working on instead of Cindy?

House: God, I’ve got to learn not to beat around the bush. By dying, I mean no matter what we do. Very, very soonshe is going to be dead. Is it still too subtle?

Cameron: I took an oath to do no harm.

House: Yeah, well, it’s not like they make you sign it or anything.

Cameron: We cure your patient, he goes back to Death Row. He goes back to Death Row, they kill him!

House: He stays here and we don’t treat him, he dies. And I still don’t treat Cindylou Who.

Foreman: Can we get on with this?

House: Yeah, I knew I could count on your help for your homie.

Foreman: [sarcastically] Exactly, I’m black. I sympathize for guys who grew up in the city kept down by the man.[Chase smirks.]

House: Makes sense to me.

Foreman: It’s a bunch of crap. You can’t blame society for the fact that you chose to become a killer. Theguy’s probably a heroin addict, which explains the tachycardia, which caused the pulmonary edema.

Chase: How does an inmate on Death Row get his hands on heroin?

Foreman: Are you serious?

House: The man knows prisons. When we’ve got a yachting question, we’ll come to you. Okay, drugs it is. Testhis hair, blood, and urine, the works. [Chase and Foreman get up, Cameron still has her angry face on. House makes an "afteryou" motion with his hand.]

[Cut to the hallway.]

Cameron: Thanks for getting my back. I thought you seminary boys were against the death penalty.

Chase: I left the seminary.

Cameron: Over their stance on capital punishment?

Chase: I’m against the death penalty in principle. In practice, however, watching a murderer die causes me a lotless grief than annoying my boss. [The three are stopped by guards who pat them down before they can go to see Clarence.]

[Cut to Clarence’s room, where the three are getting samples.]

Cameron: Department of Justice statistics show that it’s a racially motivated form of punishment. Black defendantsare ten times more likely to get a death sentence than whites.

Foreman: Doesn’t mean we need to get rid of the death penalty, do we? It just means we need to kill more white people.[Clarence wakes up with a start.] It’s okay, you’re in a hospital, we’re taking care of you. [He startsto move around violently.]

Chase Stay calm, you’re gonna be – push two milligrams Ativan! [Clarence pulls the safety rails off of thebed, causing the guards to come in and force him down, but not before he pulls the intubation tube out of his throat (yuk!).]

Clarence: Water… water.

[Cut to Diagnostics, where House is pouring himself a big red mug of coffee. Enter the Ducklings.]

House: What’s the differential for being thirsty?

Chase: He was just a little dehydrated, and out of his mind. We upped his saline drip, he’s fine now.

Foreman: Blood and urine tests came back clean, no sign of opiates in his system. [Cameron grabs a marker and is aboutto write on the board, when… ]

House: Don’t do that.

Cameron: What, you have some House theory explaining heroin use despite a negative test?

House: Nope. Only I get to write on the board. [I’ll just take this moment to say that I love that the board is titled"Dead Man Dying". All right, go on.] So it’s not drugs. What else can cause the heart to do wind sprints? Got the bloodwork back, any – [Stacy walks into his office and looks at him through the wall] – thing out of the ordinary?

Chase: His bicarb is low.

House: Yeah, but which column? Could be the result of the tachycardia, could be the cause?

Cameron: It’s the cause.

House: Why, because you want it to be? Let’s see how well that works with your other patient.

Cameron: We’re just talking semantics here. We should put him on a bicarb drip and send him back.

House: Right, buff his numbers. Don’t bother trying to figure out the underlying cause. I thought you cared aboutpatients.

Foreman: Our job isn’t to make sure he can bounce his grandkids on his lap, our job is to get him healthy enoughto go back to Death Row.

House: Our job is to diagnose him. [closing the blinds so he can’t see Stacy] What? Mommy and Daddy are having alittle fight, it doesn’t mean we’ve stopped loving you. Now, go outside and play. Get Daddy some smokes and anarterial blood gas test. [They all exit. As House leaves, he nearly runs into Stacy, who does not look amused.] Wow! Thatwas impressive. Okay, what number am I thinking of?

Stacy: Were you trying to get me fired? If you didn’t want me working here, why didn’t you just say so?

House: I just don’t want you working here, in my office. But anywhere else in the building is fine. It’s abig hospital.

Stacy: I’m a lawyer. You’re a jerk. There’s gonna to be some overlap.

House: God, I hope that was a euphemism.

Stacy: Cuddy just reamed me.

House: I hope that one means what I think it means.

Stacy: For trusting you! She figured when she hired me she’d at least have someone you couldn’t walk all over.

House: The number was six, by the way.

Stacy: I need to know, can I trust you?

House: If I hadn’t lied to you about Cuddy’s approval, my patient would be dead.

Stacy: Great. Now I know. Now we can work together.

[Cut to Foreman, preparing to draw some blood from Clarence’s thigh.]

Foreman: I’m drawing some blood from your femoral artery.

Clarence: From my what?

Foreman: Runs through your groin.

Clarence: You think you’re gonna stick me in the jewels with that?

Foreman: It’s really closer to your thigh. Technically, at this point, it seems like your jewels are more for displaypurposes, anyway.

Clarence: Hold up, hold up. Give me some pain killers, or something.

Foreman: Tough guy like you don’t need ‘em.

Clarence: Forget that, numb me up, man. [Foreman gets the painkillers, and starts to inject it. As he does, Clarence noticesa tattoo on his wrist.] You got some gang ink? Let me see that.

Foreman: It’s a Native American symbol. It means "the force of life."

Clarence: That’s what you tell all these white dudes so they let you play doctor?

Foreman: Yep. Got ‘em all fooled.

Clarence: For real, how a brother like you go from gang-banger to wearing a white coat?

Foreman: How’s a brother like you go from loving a woman to punching her skull in?

Clarence: Bitch stepped out. [Foreman stabs him with the needle.] Argh! [Foreman raises an eyebrow.]

Foreman: Sorry about that. Guess I didn’t use enough lidocaine.

[Cut to the team entering Diagnostics.]

Foreman: Blood gas came back with a pH of 7.28 and decreased HCO3.

House: Which means two things. Most importantly, Cameron was wrong about the bicarb, and less significantly, we have anew symptom. Anion gap acidosis. Who’s chubby? Come on, pretend he loves puppies. Pretend he’s a human being.What’ve you got?

Foreman: I think we should reconsider drugs.

Chase: He already tested negative.

Foreman: That’s why I said reconsider. Back in juvie, I cut up oregano and sold it as pot.

Chase: Is that how you put yourself through med school?

Foreman: What if Clarence thought he was taking heroin, but it was something else?

House: What "something else" could lead to anion gap acidosis?

Chase: Mudpiles.

House: Well, you don’t have to ask. Just wash your hands before you come back.

Chase: Methanol, uremia, diabetes…

House: Oh, it’s a mnemonic. That makes sense, too.

Cameron: Paraldehyde, INH, lactic acid –

House: Rewind.

Cameron: INH?

House: Yahtzee!

Foreman: Drugs for tuberculosis.

Chase: Nearly a quarter of the prison population is infected with TB.

House: Clever entrepreneur like Foreman here, chops up his meds, passes it off as heroin.

Cameron: INH poisoning would explain all the symptoms.

House: Who wants to head over to the prison and find Clarence’s secret stash? [No one looks too thrilled.]

Foreman: Fine, I’ll do it.

House: Great, Chase it is.

Chase: I assume you have a reason beyond wanting to make me completely miserable?

House: You’ve got a prettier mouth. Better chance the inmates will open up to you.

[Cut to… General Hospital lookalike! Oh boy!]

Guy with bandages all around his face: Perhaps I’ll come out looking just as monstrous? I mean, isn’t thatwhat I deserve? [House is watching the program in a hospital room, eating lunch, next to a patient who looks very inert. EnterWilson.]

Wilson: The man’s in a coma.

House: He didn’t mind. I asked.

Wilson: You’re getting crumbs all over him.

House: Why do you think they put TVs in coma patients’ rooms, anyway?

Wilson: Some people think they can still hear.

House: So leave them a radio. His eyes are closed; who thinks he can see? [Wilson sits on the opposite side of the bed.]

Wilson: You know why people are nice to other people?

House: Oh, I know this one. Because people are good, decent and caring. Either that, or people are cowards. If I’mmean to you, you’ll be mean to me. Mutually assured destruction.

Wilson: Exactly. You’re gonna eat these chips? [He reaches for them, but House grabs them away.]

House: You gonna get to your point?

Wilson: You need people to like you.

House: I don’t care if people like me.

Wilson: …Yes. But you need people to like you because you need people. Unless you think you can get the next courtorder yourself. If Stacy can’t trust you, you can’t use her. [House offers the chip bag.] And that’s noteven dealing with the greater agenda – [House takes the bag back before Wilson can have any] of getting her to dumpher husband and fall in love with you all over again.

House: I know you’re friends with her, but there is a code. Bros before hos, man. [He sticks his fist out, but hispager beeps. After looking at it -- ] Crap.

Wilson: What is it?

House: Death Row guy is dying.

[Cut to Clarence’s room, where he is looking quite inert. There are beeps coming from all over, but Foreman is juststanding in the corner.]

Foreman: Bradycardia. His heart rate’s dropped to 30, it’s not going to hold that much longer.

House: Are you just waiting to call time of death, or are you gonna give him atropine?

Foreman: Temporary fix?

House: Right. Anyway, those diabetics are all hung up on insulin. They’re just gonna have to have to take more. [Hestarts to push the Atropine into the IV.]

Foreman: Atropine’s only gonna buy you a few hours! We don’t even know what’s wrong with this guy –

House: Just get out of here. [Foreman leaves as Clarence’s heart rate starts to climb.]

[Cut to Chase looking through the storage cell where Clarence was being held when he was sick. His cell rings.]

Chase: [on cell] This is Chase.

House: [from the hospital desk near Diagnostics] Did you beat any confessions out of anybody?

Chase: I haven’t spoken to any inmates.

House: Does anybody do their jobs anymore?

Chase: I’ve decided Clarence’s life isn’t worth risking mine for.

House: I appreciate your candor. Did you even go to the prison or are you just out playing polo?

Chase: I’m searching both Clarence’s cells. I figure, if he’s on something, it’s stashed somewhere.

House: Unless he finished it.

Chase: Yeah, that’d be a shame. He could have shoved it anywhere, there’s envelopes stacked to the ceiling,bottles of copier toner, boxes of rubber bands [he goes on, but House has heard enough]

House: Call it off. Come on back.

[Cut to House, entering Clarence’s room with a wheeled tray. He closes the blinds, takes out two sample jars -- ]

Clarence: What’s going on?

House: You’re dying. [ -- and takes out a bottle of rum and pours two shots’ worth.] That deserves a last drink.

Clarence: You’re okay.

House: Thanks. That means a lot. [He helps Clarence to drink his shot.]

[Cut to Cameron, taking blood from Cindy.]

Cindy: All the tests have been inconclusive?

Cameron: Diagnostics is more of an art than a science.

Cindy: Should I be worried right now?

Cameron: I work for one of the top diagnosticians in the country. We’re pouring all of our energy into figuring thisout.

[Cut to House and Clarence, and an emptier bottle pouring more shots. A much emptier bottle.]

House: [slurred slightly] Thought you convicts knew how to drink. You’re at least three shots behind. [He looks asif he’s going to offer a shot to Clarence, but drinks it himself.] Now you’re four shots behind.

Clarence: You better give me the next one or I’ll kill you. [Pause, then they both laugh. Cameron enters quickly.]

Cameron: House – [She stops short as she sees House laughing and pouring shots.] I was just waiting for test results,I was…

House: Little busy right now. Getting my drink on.

Cameron: Unbelievable.

Clarence: Oof. That’s the finest piece I seen in ten years.

House: I coulda hit that.

Clarence: And you didn’t.

House: Eh.

Clarence: Then you’re the one that should be locked up.

House: Tell me something, I’ve been trying to figure this out. Why does a guy – [He gives Clarence anothershot] – who’s on Death Row suddenly try to off himself? I know you drank that copier fluid. It’s notas visually dramatic as slitting your wrists with a homemade shiv, but it’ll do the trick.

Clarence: It just hit me all of a sudden. It was like, they tell me when to eat, when to sleep, when to walk, when to talk,everything. I had to take control of something, right? When to die, I figured that was as good as anything.

House: [pouring more rum] And that thought just came to you. Just like that.

Clarence: Man, I told you. Twenty-three hours a – [House forces another shot down his throat.]

House: Mmm. Well, look. Here’s the good news. The copier fluid you drank contains about 90% methanol, which is verypoisonous and you took more than enough to kill yourself. The bad news is the alcohol you drank contains so much ethanol thatit’s gonna bind with that nasty formic acid raging through your body, and you’re just gonna pee it out. Harmlessly.

Clarence: Man, you are drunk.

House: Yes, I am. I also saved your life. [And, shot for House! Laughing] At least for now.

[Cut to House entering the hospital, wearing sunglasses.]

Stacy: Morning! [House winces at the sound.] Your head hurt?

House: No, you just have a very grating voice.

Stacy: You always were a lightweight.

House: Why are you talking to me?

Stacy: Can’t it be enough that I want to cause you pain? The patient’s okay now, you’re going to sendhim back?

House: Absolutely. [He walks into the elevator. Oh elevator, I’ve missed you! The door of the elevator almost closes,but House stops it with his cane, and it opens again.] Can I trust you?

Stacy: You used to.

House: I still think the patient’s sick. I’m keeping him here. Now, either you can do your job and keep thehospital informed, or you can help me make sure the hospital is not informed and buy me some time. [The door closes.]

[Cut to Cameron, writing Cindy’s symptoms on a corner of the white board.]

Chase: Have you done a CT?

Cameron: Yeah, I have?

Foreman: Does it have contrast?

House: [entering] She’s done everything she needs to do except tell her patient that she’s dying. I told you,only I get to play with the markers. [He erases what she wrote.] Our prisoner has a new symptom.

Cameron: I’m not telling Cindy that she’s dying until the diagnosis is confirmed.

House: I am not buying that CLARENCE is trying to take control of his life by suicide. Healthy people don’t killthemselves.

Foreman: Healthy people don’t kill other people.

House: Guy just filed an appeal in a state that hasn’t actually killed anybody in about 30 years.

Chase: What if it wasn’t suicide? What if it was an escape plan? Drink enough methanol to get transferred to a hospital,try to escape from here?

House: Excellent. Explains everything, except the symptom that got him here. His heart went nuts before he got stuck inthat storage cell and chugged a toner martini. I think there’s something going on in his head. Check for intracraniallesions, brain infections, autoimmune diseases… do a CT, LP, full workup. State’s paying, so go nuts. [They allleave, Cameron in a huff.]

[Cut to Foreman, who’s always the lucky one who gets to do a spinal tap. He’s looking at Clarence’s back,which has a number of scars in addition to the prison tats.]

Foreman: Where’d you get these scars?

Clarence: I got shivved my first month in. After I healed up I got my ass. You guys still think I’m sick?

Foreman: [prepping a needle] Obviously.

Clarence: Why you care? Why don’t you just let me die?

Foreman: I’m different than you.

Clarence: Right, you love me like your own mama. That’s why the nurse says you kicked her out when my heart nearlystopped.

Foreman: Take a deep breath. [He sticks Clarence in the spine with the needle.] Any family history of mental illness?

Clarence: I always heard my pa was crazy; I never met the man with my mom, it was the drugs.

Foreman: Any siblings?

Clarence: Got a brother, pretty much raised him on my own.

Foreman: Inspirational story. He doin’ time, too?

Clarence: Hey. He’s a good kid. Don’t go judgin’ what you don’t know.

Foreman: How’s his health?

Clarence: I haven’t heard from him since I went inside. Spent 16 years with him, changed his damn diapers. Can youimagine your whole life bein’ about the worst thing you ever did?

Foreman: You killed four people. Somehow, making mac and cheese just the way he wants kind of loses its significance.

[Cut to House entering his office. Cameron is sitting at his desk.]

House: Oh no. Now you’ve left your entire body in my chair. What does that mean you want?

Cameron: I need a segmental bronchoalveolar lavage.

House: I take it the CT with contrast came back.

Cameron: They’re not definitive.

House: Biopsy would be.

Cameron: Biopsy would be invasive and unnecessary.

House: And definitive. But you don’t want definitive, you want to hang on to your delusions as long as you can.

Cameron: A lavage could prove it’s not cancer.

House: But you need me to approve the procedure. Must be a bitch. The answer is no.

Cameron: Why? Because it’s me? I’m over you. I’ve jumped on the bandwagon. I hate you, okay?

House: Great. Let’s treat her.

Cameron: What is it? You won’t help Cindy but you’re obsessed with this piece of dirt! Are you just tryingto prove that who someone is doesn’t matter, that all that matters is your stupid puzzle? Fine. Treat them the same.That’s all I’m asking. One test.

House: Wow, that is remarkable. According to those patchouli-oil selling new-agers, it’s supposed to be the terminalpatient, but you’re going through the five stages. You just made a completely seamless transition from anger to bargaining.Cover two more of my clinic hours, you can have your one procedure. [Cameron nods and leaves.]

[Cut to Chase and Foreman scanning Clarence’s brain.]

Chase: No lesions, no aneurysms. Ironically, the mind of a killer looks completely normal.

Foreman: If someone asks you to describe me to them, what’s the first thing you’d tell them?

Chase: Insecure. What are you asking?

Foreman: Like, if you were setting me up on a blind date. Would you describe me to the girl as the black guy, a neurologist,car thief?

Chase: This guy’s really getting to you, isn’t he?

[Cut to Cameron, performing the procedure on Cindy. Wonderful CGI shot up Cindy’s nose.]

[Cut to Cameron looking at the test results with Wilson.]

Cameron: There’s no sign of infection.

Wilson: You’re gonna have to do the biopsy.

[Cut to Cuddy yelling at House in his office.]

Cuddy: Your Death Row guy’s still here!

House: Yeah, sorry. Just gotta get him stabilized. Probably keep him on fluids for a few more hours, then off he goes.

Cuddy: Oh yeah? ‘Cause I’m figuring that you still think he’s sick.

House: Figuring requires deductive reasoning. I’m figuring that you did no figuring. Stacy just ratted me out, right?So much for attorney-client privilege.

Cuddy: I’m the client, you moron. Stacy has a duty to this hospital.

House: Right.

Cuddy: I’m sending him back to prison.

House: Whoa, can’t. Court order.

Cuddy: Court order says he has to be declared healthy. Doesn’t specify what doctor needs to make that declaration.[Cuddy leaves, and House goes to follow.]

[Cut to Clarence screaming his head off.]

Cuddy: [bored] What is it, Clarence?

Clarence: My gut!

Cuddy: Would you describe it as a shooting pain? A throbbing pain? Or maybe an imaginary pain because you don’t wantto go back to prison?

House: Where does it hurt?

Clarence: My gut, I feel like I’m getting stabbed! [Screams again.]

House: Well, he’d know. Let me take a look.

Cuddy: Oh, so everybody lies except a convicted murderer. [CGI shot of some nasty stuff in Clarence’s bowels. Ew.House removes the covers to reveal blood flowing out of Clarence’s nether regions. More ew.]

House: I don’t think he’s faking this stuff. What do you think, Doctor? [Clarence screams a lot more for emphasis.]

[Cut to House looking at Clarence’s prison records in his office. Stacy enters.]

Stacy: I didn’t have any choice.

House: No, you had to tell Cuddy. She’s your boss, I get it. Hitler thought he was doing the world a favor, too.

Stacy: Yeah, pretty much on that same level.

House: Gandhi didn’t march the sea because his buddies asked him too, Pol Pot didn’t wipe out the teachersbecause he wanted to make friends.

Stacy: You’re not making friends right now.

House: I trusted you.

Stacy: I know.

House: Wilson’s a fool. I’m an idiot.

Stacy: I had to do what I thought was right.

House: It’s the only reason anyone does anything.

[Cut to Diagnostics.]

Foreman: The surgery went fine. They removed almost a foot of necrotic bowel. They’re shackling him and taking himto recovery.

House: I wonder. I wonder why Clarence killed that second inmate.

Foreman: Fine, I’ll bite. What the hell are you talking about?

House: Everything we do is dictated by motive. [As he erases the white board] Why did he kill his girlfriend?

Foreman: Because he’s a maniac!

House: Is that the reason he gave?

Foreman: She was cheating on him.

House: Jealousy. [He writes it on the board.] That gets him sent to prison, where he kills inmate number one. Why?

Foreman: Guy attacked him first.

House: Revenge. Who’d he killed after that?

Chase: Prison guard.

House: Got a file full of abuse complaints. Probably been kicking Clarence’s ass for months.

Foreman: Clarence is just ridding the world of bad seeds.

House: Call that one "retribution". Then he kills inmate number two. Anybody know why? [Chase looks through the file.]Nuh-uh. It’s not in there. [He draws a giant question mark.]

[Cut to Clarence.]

Clarence: All of a sudden I got to have a reason?

House: It’s an anomaly. Doctors love anomalies. Dark spot on an x-ray, bright spot on an MRI…. Killing thatsecond inmate is the homicidal equivalent of blood in the urine. It doesn’t fit. I’m interested in things thatdon’t fit. Tell me why you did it. Your other victims you were almost bragging about. What was different about thisguy?

Clarence: It happened when I was in gen-pop. I was in the library, just readin’, and I started feelin’ realnervous. This guy was staring at me. I could feel his eyes digging holes in the back of my neck, made me feel crazy. Sweatwas pouring down my face. I could hear my heartbeat racing in my ears. I just raged out on the dude.

[Cut to House, Foreman and Chase walking to the elevator.]

House: So what’s the differential for raging out?

Foreman: Excess testosterone, steroids –

Chase: Adrenaline –

House: Prep Clarence for surgery.

Foreman: Care to share with the class?

House: Oh, come on. Do I have to spell it out for you? Pheochromocytoma. Actually, I’m not sure how you spell it.[Ed. – But I do!] But you said it yourself, adrenaline. Pheochomocytoma sits on top of the adrenal gland, randomly spitsout oodles of the stuff. It’s perfect, it explains everything. The tachycardia, pulmonary edema, the vasoconstrictionthat caused the necrotic bowel –

Chase: Even explains how he had the strength to rip the rail off his bed. [House enters the elevator.]

Foreman: But pheo’s extremely rare.

House: I love rare. Set up an MRI. Where’s Cameron? [They shrug.] Like I don’t know.

[Cut to Wilson, walking toward Cindy’s room. Cameron is in Cindy’s room, talking and laughing with her. Wilson knocks on the glass.]

Wilson: Dr. Cameron? Could I borrow you for a consult? [She goes outside.] Bittersweet thing about being head of the oncologydepartment, I get CC’ed on all the biopsy results.

Cameron: Yeah, I know. She’s terminal.

Wilson: Yeah. So I take it you were in there informing her?

Cameron: Well, I… I hadn’t exactly gotten around to that, but I was just –

Wilson: Doing what? Making friends?

Cameron: Cindy’s divorced. She doesn’t have any kids, no siblings, both her parents are gone –

Wilson: It’s not your job to be her friend. Do you understand? And it’s not worth it. She feels better herfew final days, and you’re not the same, maybe for years.

Cameron: You don’t think it’s worth it.

Wilson: I know it’s not worth it.

Cameron: My husband w – [She stops, looks at Cindy, and turns back.] I met him just after he was diagnosed with terminalbrain cancer. If I hadn’t married him, he was alone. When a good person dies, there should be an impact on the world.Somebody should notice. Somebody should be upset. [She goes back in.]

[Cut to Clarence.]

Clarence: Pheo-what?

House: I don’t even remember. It’s just a fancy way of saying small, adrenaline-secreting tumor. Yeah, thatclarified it for you. All you need to know is if I’m right, we can fix it. Just need to find it. We need an MRI. It’scompletely painless for most people.

Clarence: But not for me?

House: I assume you got those tattoos in prison. Prison tats often contain inks with heavy metals. The MRI’s basicallya giant magnet. It’d suck those metallic inks right out of your skin.

[Cut to Clarence being put into the MRI. He looks very anxious. The scan starts, and then we hear screaming, and see himwrithing around.]

House: Stop squirming. Don’t make us do this again. Big baby.

Chase: Still don’t see anything.

Clarence: Turn it off!

House: There’s Waldo. Found it, Clarence.

Clarence: Turn it off! Turn this damn thing off!

House: Keep him in there until you guys see it too. [He leaves.]

Foreman: Son of a bitch.

[Cut to Foreman entering House’s office at night.]

Foreman: Looks like they got the pheo out successfully. So what now?

House: Clarence goes back to Death Row.

Foreman: Just like that?

House: He’s cured.

Foreman: That tumor caused random shots of adrenaline, which obviously led to the rage attacks that made him a murdererin the first place.

House: By God, you’re right! Let’s call the surgeons, we’ve got to save that tumor. Put it on the witnessstand.

Foreman: We could testify at Clarence’s appeal.

House: [sniffs] You smell that? I think that is the stink of hypocrisy. You wouldn’t even consider the notion thatClarence’s social upbringing was responsible for what he became, but now you’re sprinting to the witness standto blame everything on a little tumor.

Foreman: A person’s upbringing and their biology are completely different.

House: Yeah. See, you only overcame one of them. Well, let’s just give Clarence a free pass, hmmm? Course, you’reprobably going to piss off all those other pheo sufferers who managed to control their rage attacks and become lawyers, racecar doctors, and even doctors. Removing that tumor puts a stop to those random shots adrenaline, but it doesn’t absolvehim.

Foreman: You want him to be executed?

House: That’s not what I’m saying.

Foreman: Got an opinion?

House: Everyone’s got an opinion. [Foreman turns to leave as "Hallelujah", the most overused great song in mediabegins to play.]

Foreman: I, uh, I think I’m gonna testify at Clarence’s appeal.

House: You’ll do what you think is right. On your own time. [He leaves.]

[Cut to Cameron finally telling Cindy that she’s dying.]

Cindy: But it’s just a cough. [Cameron tries not to cry, and gives Cindy a hug.]

[Let’s continue with the closing montage. Clarence is led out the hospital, flanked by numerous guards. Foreman watcheshim leave. House is sitting at his desk, watching his now-almost-empty bottle of rum. He pours some into a coffee mug (awesome!)and looks at the five steps written on his light board. He erases them all but "acceptance", and then that one goes too.]


END