HOUSE, M.D.
1X07: FIDELITY
Original Airdate on FOX: December 28, 2004
Written by Thomas L. Moran
Directed by Bryan Spicer
Transcript written by Celebmir
Archived at TWIZ TV.COM with permission from House: Transcripts and More!
==========================
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[Ed and his
friend are jogging in the park]
Friend: So now
the plan is either find ourselves a new counselor, stick it out with the old
one but go more often, or resign ourselves to the fact that she's never gonna
be happy no matter what I do, so let's just take the money we're wasting and
put it towards a membership at Lakeview, you know?
Ed: I’m guessing
the last option has [???] you present it?
Friend: Yeah…
Jeez what’s with you? It usually takes about half speed to stay with me.
Ed: I didn't get
a lot of sleep last night.
Friend: How are
things with Elise?
Ed: Great.
Friend: Great?
Ed: Yeah.
Friend: Simple
answers. You’re either out of breath or you're lying to me.
Ed: Yeah… we
have our moments, but they usually work out. Can I get some water?
Friend: Yeah…
How do you work things out?
Ed: Talk,
someone apologizes. Man I shouldn't have drank last night.
Friend: You mean
you apologize.
Ed: Yeah, I
guess.
Friend: How
often do you guys have sex?
Ed: Enough…
Friend: You do
it this morning? [Ed smirks, goes to shake his head] You did, you did it this
morning, maybe that’s why you can’t stand up. Come on!
[Ed and Elise’s
house]
Ed: Elise!
Honey, I’m dehydrated. [opens fridge] We have anything with electrolytes? [In
the bedroom] Sleeping beauty, wake up, this is an emergency. The fridge is
empty. Come on, it’s almost four! Elise, sweetie…
Elise: Call
Jacques, tell him I’m not feeling well.
Ed: It’s
Saturday. You haven’t been to work in three days, remember?
Elise: Just let
me sleep.
Ed: Come on. You
haven’t been out of bed since Wednesday.
Elise: Leave me
alone…
Ed: Come on,
lets go.
Elise: No, leave
me alone.
Ed: Honey-
Elise: [smacks
him, hard] I SAID LEVE ME ALONE!!!! [comes back to herself] I think there’s
something wrong with me.
[PPTH Lobby]
Cameron: She’s
been averaging 18 hours of sleep a day since her admission.
House: Clinical
depression. Incredibly contagious. Every time I’m around one of them I get
blue.
Cameron: It’s
not clinical depression.
House: Great,
you got it all figured out. You don’t need me.
Cameron: Three
ER doctors, two neurologists and a radiologist have all figured out what its
not, we need to figure out what it IS.
House: Well
maybe if above mentioned doctors were interested in my opinion they would have
asked for it.
Cameron: None of
them are willing to subject themselves to you.
House: No pain
no gain. [gets in the elevator]
Cameron: The
blood work showed no signs of inflammation, and no one can figure out what’s
actually the cause of--
House: Huh.
Cameron: What?
House: Husband
described her as being unusually irritable recently.
Cameron: And?
House: I didn't
know it was possible for a woman to be "unusually" irritable.
[elevator dings, they get off]
Cameron: Nice
try, but you’re a misanthrope, not a masochist.
House: What’s
the first thing you ask a doctor who’s referring a patient?
Cameron: Are you
questioning my ability to take a history? [House just looks at her] “What’s the
primary”--
House: Not
“what?”. “Why?”
Cameron:
Diseases don’t have motives.
House: No, but
doctors do. Why this patient, what interests you? Give me the chart.
Cameron: Why?
House: I find
your interest interesting.
[Office]
House She’s
irritable, sleeping 18 hours a day.
Foreman: What’s
interesting about that? Hypersomnia is usually accompanied by irritability in
depressed patients.
House: True, but
not relevant. She’s not depressed.
Foreman: Hello!
She’s sleeping 18 hours a day!
House: Fever.
Clinical depression does not cause fever.
Foreman: She
could be sick and depressed?
House: She’s
sick! Dammit, why didn’t I think of that?
Foreman: That’s
what I mean…
Cameron:
Elevated SED rate indicates inflammation.
Foreman:
Hypersomnia and personality changes point toward the brain.
House: Not the
spleen. Thank goodness we hired a neurologist! Brain symptoms… hmm, could this
be a brain problem?
Cameron: No
other systemic signs of inflammation, probably not vasculitis.
Chase: What
about parasites? Malaria, chagas?
Cameron:
Patient’s never been outside the United States, especially the tropics.
Chase: You mean
she claims she’s never been outside the U.S.
House: Very
good.
Cameron: Doesn’t
matter, blood and c-sub smears show no sign of parasites.
House: Has to be
a tumor then.
Foreman: A tumor
sitting directly on top of the brain stem? That three ER doctors, two
neurologists, and a radiologist missed?
House: Partridge
in a pear tree missed it too. Redo the blood work and get a new MRI with 2
millimeter cuts through the [some complex brain term, sound like
“mesodinasipellic”???]. [leaves the office, calls out as he leaves] And check
for evil stepmothers. This much sleep usually indicates poisoned apples.
[Exam Room 1]
House: Anything
else beside the shortness of breath?
Mrs. Campbell:
Not really, its actually just kind of a tightness.
House: You
smoke?
Mrs. Campbell:
No, never.
House: Exercise?
Mrs. Campbell:
Eight hours a day. [House looks amazed] I teach preschool.
House: Sounds
fun. Any history of heart disease in your family?
Mrs. Campbell:
Not that I know of.
House: [pulls
out a stethoscope] Take a deep breath. Been under a lot of stress lately?
Mrs. Campbell:
None more than usual.
House: You’re
probably just a little anemic, but I’m going to do an EKG just to make sure.
Mrs. Campbell:
[indicating her hospital gown] Do I need to take this off?
House: No, you
can just pull that down in front. [she does so. He turns around to see that she
is very well-endowed] Good. Lord. Are those real?
Mrs. Campbell:
Do they look real?
House: They
look… pretty damn good.
Mrs. Campbell:
They were a present for my husband’s 40th . I figured he'd enjoy
them more than a sweater.
House: That's so
sweet. I’m afraid the cause of your problem could be staring us right in the
face. Actually I guess I’m the one doing the staring. Of course I can’t be
sure, I’d like to consult a colleague. He’s actually somewhat of an expert in
these matters. [picks up the phone] Can I get a page on Dr. Wilson?
[Elise’s Room]
Ed: A tumor?
Foreman: We
don’t know, we’re checking just to be safe.
Ed: They already
checked for that.
Foreman: The
previous MRI had a broader view.
Cameron: Some
tumors are almost impossible to see unless we know exactly where to look.
Elise: That
means it would be small, right?
Cameron: Yes.
Ed: So you'd be
able to operate? Take it out?
Foreman: If it
is a tumor, there are a variety of treatment options, but there are variables
other than just size.
Ed: [to Elise]
Don’t worry…
Elise: Too late.
[MRI]
Cameron: Try to
remain as still as possible. The less distortion there is, the more we'll be
able to see.
[coming out of
exam room 1]
Wilson: Well.
That’s what breasts look like.
House: Is a lie
a lie if everybody knows it’s a lie?
Wilson: Well, if
a tree pretends to fall in a forest… House, come on, they're breasts. They're a
birthday present, not a philosophical treatise.
House: Lie
number one, she did not do that for her husband, she did that for herself. She
thinks if she looks different, she'll be different.
Wilson: No, she
thinks if she looks different, she'll be more attractive, which, I have to say…
House: Not to
her husband. Cosmetic surgery is so that everyone else will look at us
differently. Same reason you're wearing that tie.
Wilson: Well
exactly, that was going to be my next point.
House: Last
three months, same five ties. Thursday should be that paisley thing.
Wilson: It's a
gift from my wife.
House: No its
not. Julie hates green. You bought that yourself. You want to look pretty. At
work. [singsong] Wilson's got a girlfriend…
Wilson: Stop!
Stop. I don’t.
Cuddy: It takes
TWO department heads to treat shortness of breath? What, do the complications
increase exponentially with cup size?
House: I want an
EKG and blood tests including tox screen on Mrs.… Exam Room 1.
Cuddy: You're
ordering tests to cover your lechery. Interesting.
House: Very
tricky case. [to Wilson] You love everybody. That’s your pathology.
[Elise’s Room]
Foreman: There were
no lesions and no mass effect that we could see.
Elise: What does
that mean?
Foreman: It
means we’re still not sure what’s causing your neurological problems.
Ed: I know some
thing are hard to cure, but what I just don’t get is why it’s taking so long to
figure out what’s wrong with her.
Cameron: I know
you’re scared, I would be too.
Elise: I don’t
feel good…
Foreman: You
feeling nauseous?
Ed: Honey? You
all right? [cool CGI of a muscle tensing in Elise’s throat]
Cameron: She’s
seizing! Get her on her side. I need some Ativan!
Ed: What’s
happening?
Cameron: She’s
having a seizure.
Foreman: She’s
aspirating, suction!
Cameron: Come on
Elise!
[In Elise’s
room, she is being given some kind of test. She can’t draw circles]
[Office]
Wilson: The MRI
reveals nothing.
Foreman: That we
were able to detect.
Wilson: It’s not
a tumor.
Foreman: A small
glioma could hide from contrast. We could do a PET scan.
House: Yes,
that’s how a responsible doctor would waste his time in the situation.
Foreman:
Suddenly tests and radiologists aren’t capable of error?
House: A glioma
not presenting on a contrast MRI would have to be smaller than a grain of sand,
which does not a gravely ill person make.
Chase: It could
be just postictal disorientation.
Cameron: We
would have seen improvement by now.
Chase: Late
stage Lyme Disease can cause seizures.
House: Does the
husband care about her?
Cameron: He
hasn't left her bedside.
House: Now way…
it also means she doesn’t have Lyme Disease.
Foreman: What?
Love conquers all?
House: Lyme
Disease initially presents with a rash. Mr. Clingy would have noticed.
Foreman: We've
looked at everything else.
Wilson: Did you
look at her breasts?
House: Pff. Men.
Wilson: Could be
paraneoplastic.
House: She have
any family history of breast cancer?
Cameron: Her
mother died of it.
House: [to
Foreman] The brain, but not the brain. Clever, huh?
[The hall
outside of Elise’s room]
Ed: How can
breast cancer cause problems in her brain?
Cameron: There
are molecular similarities between brain cells and tumor cells. Paraneoplastic
Syndrome causes the body's own antibodies to get thrown off track. They end up
attacking the brain instead of the tumor.
Ed: So if you do
find the tumor, what do you do?
Foreman: We
treat the underlying malignancy. Once there's no tumor to attack, there’s
nothing for the antibodies to get confused about.
Ed: If the
tumor's treatable.
Foreman:
Exactly.
[Some room with
a lot of equipment. Elise is getting a mammogram, etc]
Elise: OW!
Cameron: I'm
sorry, I know it's uncomfortable. The tighter we go, the better the image will
be.
Elise: Least
it'll keep me awake.
Cameron: Don't
worry, it's almost over.
Elise: I wish
people would stop telling me not to worry.
Cameron: I'm
sorry.
Elise: My mom
was the same age. We've been trying to get pregnant for over a year. I guess
we're lucky we didn’t.
Cameron: A lot
has changed since your mom died. Don’t worr-- don't give up.
[Office]
House: No tumor?
Cameron: The MRI
and mammogram only showed a few benign calcifications.
Wilson: It's
most likely a small cell tumor, its no surprise we're having trouble finding
it. We should do a PET scan. Start with her lungs, and maybe her bones…
Sometimes it presents with no tumor at all.
Chase: How can a
disease caused by a tumor present if there's no tumor?
Wilson: It
happens. Twelve percent of cases.
Chase: And how
do you treat it if there's no tumor?
House: You
don’t. Those twelve percent have no treatment. They were too busy looking for
the tumor, right till they put the patient in the ground.
Foreman: What
choice do we have?
House: Treat the
symptoms. IV Immunoglobulin
Foreman: So
we're just going to ignore the tumor?
House:
Eventually it'll get bigger. Then it'll be really easy to find. One of you
needs to check out where she works.
Chase: Why?
House: Cause the
husband's not sick.
Chase: Meaning?
Wilson: If it's
not paraneoplastic and it is a reaction to some kind of toxic, it’s obviously
not coming from their home.
House: Foreman,
you do it.
[Getting off the
elevator]
Foreman: Why are
you riding me?
House: It’s what
I do… has it gotten worse lately?
Foreman: Yeah.
Seems to me.
House: Really.
Well that rules out the race thing. Cause you were just as black last week.
[The kitchen
where Elise works]
Foreman: How
long has Elise worked here?
Jacques: Three years,
she’s my best rotisseur.
Foreman: What’s
that?
Jacques: The
rotisseur prepares the roasted meats and gravies.
Foreman: How do
you clean your grill?
Jacques:
[something in French] They say elbow grease.
Foreman: Do you
use chemical cleaners?
Jacques: Ah, no.
Absolutely no, our chefs don't do the cleaning, anyway.
Foreman: What
about pesticides? You must spray for roaches and that sort of thing?
Jacques: Nope,
my kitchen is clean. No roaches. [Something in French to another guy] I need to
get back to work.
Foreman: And the
fact that I’m here asking you these questions, it doesn’t worry you?
Jacques: Look at
me. I’m here 18 hours a day. That guy practically lives here, he does live
here… I use the same detergents for 15 years and everyone is healthy as a
horse. Whatever Elise has she didn’t get here. Tell her I hope she feels
better, and I had to get a new rotisseur.
[Foreman sees
that there is rabbit on a cutting board]
[Elise’s Room]
Elise: Where's
Ed?
Cameron: He went
down to the gift shop to buy a shirt. I told him I'd stay up here in case you
woke up.
Elise: You must
have better things to do.
Cameron: I send
my laundry out.
Elise: You're
not married?
Cameron: [curt]
No.
Elise: Waiting
for the perfect guy?
Cameron:
[smiling now] Let me guess. You’ve already found him.
Elise: He threw
my towels out the window.
Cameron: What?
Elise: It’s how
we met. Freshman year, he came to a party my roommate and I threw. He spent most
of the night on the bathroom floor. He figured I wouldn’t notice vomit on the
towels if I didn’t have any towels.
Cameron: I'm
assuming he came back the next day to apologize?
Elise: No way.
We had to track him down. Conflict resolution has never been one of Ed’s strong
points. Nobody’s perfect, right?
Cameron: I
guess.
Elise: Oh my
neck hurts.
Cameron:
[adjusts the pillow] You've been in this bed for a really long time. We're
gonna do the same test we did last night, ok? Do you know what day it is?
Elise:
[distractedly scratches her arm] My arm itches.
Cameron: Its
probably just a mild skin irritation, I’ll get you some hydrocortisone in a
minute. Do you know what day it is?
Elise: [still
scratching] Tuesday. It really itches.
Cameron: I'm
gonna get you that cream right now.
[Elise scratches
and stares in horror as BUGS (lots and lots of bugs) burst out of a boil in her
arm]
Elise: Oh my
God! Get them off! Someone! Get them off of me!
Cameron: Elise
calm down… I need some Haldol, 5 milligrams. There's nothing there, Elise.
There's nothing there! [Elise continues to scream]
[Shots of Elise
being strapped down… Foreman and House are heading for the office]
Foreman: We had
to sedate her.
House: You gave
sedatives to a patient who’s already sleeping 18 hours a day?
Foreman: It was
better than letting her scratch all the skin off her arms.
House: Or
supposed to be.
[Office]
Wilson:
Creepy-crawlies are consistent with paraneoplastic syndrome.
Cameron: Onset
immediately after IVIG isn't.
House: There is
a simple explanation. Maybe she really has bugs under her skin.
Chase:
Infection?
House: That’s
what the worsening of symptoms after immunotherapy would suggest.
Foreman: Blood cultures
and the timeline rule out most bacteria.
House: If a
patient throws up on your shoes do you clean up "most" of it?
Foreman: The
symptoms rule out the rest. Serology rules out viruses, CSS smears rule out
parasites.
House: In the
final stage of African Trypanosomiasis almost all the parasites are inside the
brain. It's possible they wouldn't show on smears.
Foreman: But
it's not possible for a patient who's never been to Africa to have African
Sleeping Sickness.
House: I'm just
saying it fits the symptoms.
Wilson: She
could have got it from a transfusion.
House: Or I'm
just saying she could have got it from a transfusion.
Cameron: Which
she never had.
House: [glares
at her] Okay…
Wilson: What
about toxins?
Foreman: No, the
kitchen she works in is cleaner than some hospitals. But they do serve rabbit.
Rabbit Fever fits her symptoms.
Chase: Tularemia
initially presents with a rash or ulcer near the infection site.
Foreman: Not if
she inhaled it. Chopping the meat with a cleaver could easily aerosolize the
bacteria.
Cameron: No,
then she'd have respiratory symptoms.
Foreman: Maybe
she ignored it, figured she had a cold.
House: We
rejected Lyme Disease because the couple would have noticed a rash, but a wet hacking
cough is just going to slip right by?
Foreman: Hey,
it’s either that or she missed her exit on the turnpike and wound up in Africa.
House: Two lousy
ideas. Unfortunately they're better than all the other ideas. Tularemia. Bizarre.
Very nice. That’s why I ride you. [goes into his own office, turns on the TV]
Cameron: Did he
just turn on the TV?
Wilson: He needs
to think.
[In the lab]
Chase: So this
should tell us whether or not she’s got rabbit fever?
Cameron: For a
diagnosis of Tularemia you need a four-fold increase in serum antibody levels.
To measure an increase you need a before, all we have is an after.
Chase: A single
titer over 160 would be a big clue.
Foreman: “That’s
why I ride you.” What does that mean? Even when I have a good idea it’s because
of him?
Chase: [smirks]
Actually I think he said your idea was a lousy idea.
Cameron: It has
to be one of these two conditions. I say we take our best guess and just start
treatment. Or treat both.
Chase: The
treatment for Tularemia can cause aplastic anemia.
Foreman: How
come he doesn’t ride you guys?
Chase: He's got
a crush on you. He just doesn't know how to show it.
Cameron:
[smiles] Get over it, he rides everybody.
Chase: And the
treatment for sleeping sickness kills one in ten patients.
Cameron: So we
start with the safer treatment.
Foreman: By
“safer” you mean the one that’s slightly less likely to kill her?
[House’s office,
he turns the TV off]
House: Foreman
got the gang testing for Tularemia?
Wilson: Yep.
House: Probably
inconclusive, but worth doing. So what's her name? When do I get to meet her?
Wilson: There's
nobody. Give it up.
House: Your lips
say no, your shoes say yes.
Wilson: Well
they're French. You can't trust a word they say.
House: Solid,
yet stylish. A professional woman would be impressed. I'm thinking accountant,
actuary, maybe. It's somebody in the hospital. Patient? No, chemo's not sexy.
Daughter of the patient? She would certainly have the neediness you need.
Wilson: I'm not
gonna date a patient’s daughter.
House: Very
ethical. Of course, most married men would say they don’t date at all.
Wilson: There
was no date! [House glares] I had lunch with one of the nurses. It's her first time
in an oncology unit and she's having a tough time, emotionally.
House: Perfect.
Wilson: I wanted
to be nice. That’s all. I mean it.
House: You
always do. It's part of your charm.
Cuddy: [enters]
Hi boys. Mrs. Campbell's test results. [they keep their faces blank] Oh, you
remember her, the preschool teacher with the heart of silicon.
House: Nope,
doesn't ring a bell.
Cuddy: They came
in yesterday, I figured you guys would have been all over them. I know how
concerned you are.
House: [to
Wilson] She's all upset because we paid more attention to the other girl. You
check out her ass, I've got the chest.
Cuddy: The tests
were normal. Course that's just my opinion, you may want to call a couple of
guys from maintenance in for a consult.
House: [to
Wilson] You check her EKG results before she left the other day?
Wilson: You
ordered it.
House: You're
the responsible one.
Cuddy: What’s
wrong? They look normal to me.
House: [to Cuddy]
Where is she?
Cuddy: Waiting
downstairs, why?
House: I was
right.
[Exam Room 1]
Mrs. Campbell:
Do I have to get rid of the implants?
House:
Surprisingly, no. But your EKG shows a slightly decreased heart rate.
Mrs. Campbell:
Is that a problem?
House: You told
me you hadn’t changed your diet or exercise, were you lying?
Mrs. Campbell:
Lying?
House: Does your
husband have high blood pressure?
Mrs. Campbell:
My husband?
House: Yeah..
see, if you’re gonna repeat everything I say this conversation is gonna take
twice as long.
Mrs. Campbell:
Yes, he was diagnosed six moths ago…
House: He do a
lot of cooking at home?
Mrs. Campbell:
Not really, other than oatmeal in the morning.
House: Did you
happen to notice a slightly odd taste to the oatmeal lately?
Mrs. Campbell:
Wait, are you saying that--
House: That it
looks like your husband stirred in some of his blood pressure medication along
with brown sugar.
Mrs. Campbell:
You think my husbands trying to poison me?!
House: No,
nothing like that. He just doesn’t want to have sex with you. [Mrs. Campbell
looks stunned] Decreased sex drive is one of the most common side effects of
the beta blockers he's been taking. I’m guessing he figured if you're both
frigid, no harm no foul. You should have gotten him the sweater.
Mrs. Campbell:
That’s ridiculous.
House: Fine. But
if you’re still concerned about the shortness of breath, I’d start making your
own breakfast. [opens the door to leave]
Mrs. Campbell:
Wait! What should I do?
House: Well, if
you care about your husband at all, I'd do the responsible thing: buy yourself
some condoms, go to a bar, find… [seems to realize something] Huh. [leaves]
[The Lab. A paper
prints right as House walks in]
House: Lab tests
inconclusive?
Cameron: Not
surprisingly.
House: No. Too
bad. Luckily, I have the answer. [pause]
Chase: To what?
House: Thanks
for asking. The life itself. Sex. Anything that can be transmitted via the
blood can be transmitted through sex.
Foreman:
Sleeping sickness from sex?
House: It’s not
without precedent.
Foreman: I'm
pretty sure it is. Unless you’re talking about going to Africa and having sex
with the tse tse fly.
House: A Portuguese
man was diagnosed three years ago with CNS affected sleeping sickness. His only
connection with Africa was through a girlfriend who served under the military
in Angola.
Chase: Oi,
where’d you find that
House: The
journal de Instituto de Higina y Medicina Tropical. You don't read Portuguese?
Cameron: You do?
House: I’m
pretty sure that’s what it said. Either that or it was an ad for sunglasses.
Cameron: Her
husband has never been to Africa either.
House: Ooh,
stymied again. Your logic is bulletproof.
Cameron: I think
ignoring respiratory symptoms is more likely than cheating.
House: Because?
Cameron: They're
completely devoted to each other.
House: Because?
Cameron: They
love each other.
House: Or?
Chase: They're
overcompensating for guilt.
House: [to
Cameron] Find out which it is.
Cameron: You
want me to ask a man whose wife is about to die if he cheated on her?
House: No, I
want you to be polite and let her die. [Cameron gives him a look] Actually, I
don't want you to ask her anything. Foreman take the husband, Chase take the
wife.
[The hall right
outside the lab]
Cameron: You
don't trust me to do my job?
House: We all
formulate questions based on the answers we want to hear.
Cameron: And how
exactly do you re-formulate "Have you screwed around?"
House: Did you
know she’s been trying to get pregnant?
Cameron: Yes.
House: After you
got so freaked about the sick babies a while ago I figured that was your thing.
But you've never been prescribed folic acid, and you can't lose a baby if
you’ve never been pregnant.
Cameron: You
pulled my medical records?
House: You
coughed the other day, I was concerned.
Cameron: You
were curious. Like an eight-year old boy with a puzzle that’s just a little to
grown-up for him to figure out. [stalks off]
House:
To-MAY-to, to-MAH-to…
[A cool scene
alternating from Foreman/Ed in the lobby to Chase/Elise in her room]
Ed: So… it’s
either sleeping sickness or this rabbit thing.
Foreman: They’re
both fatal without treatment. And unfortunately the treatment for both is
extremely dangerous.
Ed: Are there
test you can do?
Foreman: Not at
this stage. But each condition has a unique history. We're hoping your answers
to a few questions will help us.
Ed: Sure.
Whatever you need to know.
Chase: Before
the sleeping problems, did you have any trouble breathing, a cough that
wouldn't go away, anything like that?
Elise: No
Chase: Are you
certain?
Ed: Absolutely.
I've never been away from her for more than a night, if she had breathing
troubles, I would have noticed.
Foreman: [sighs]
The other condition is significantly more likely if… if you've had an affair.
Chase: Have you
ever had an affair?
Elise: Of course
not.
Chase: You sure?
Ed: I think I'd
remember cheating on my wife.
Foreman: You
might be reluctant to admit it--
Ed: No.
Foreman: I just
want to be perfectly clear. If your wife has sleeping sickness and we don't
treat her, she'll die.
Elise: I would
never do that to Ed. I love him.
Ed: Absolutely
not. I love her
[Office. House
is packing up his stuff]
House: Alright
then. They say no cheating, we cross of sleeping sickness. Any new ideas? Ok,
we go with Foreman's Tularemia. Start her on IV-Chloramphenicol 25 milligrams
per kilogram four times a day. Good night. [leaves]
[Elise’s Room.
Cameron is administering the medicine]
Elise: Where’s
Ed?
Cameron: Right
next to you. Two down, two to go.
Elise: Two days?
Cameron: No,
doses. You have about twenty more days of this fun.
Elise: What time
is it?
Cameron: About
four a.m. I pulled the short straw. [checks the monitor] Flow rate looks good.
No rash or flushing…
Elise: [somewhat
incoherent] What time is it?
Cameron: Four
a.m. Do you not remember just asking?
Elise: I don’t
know ………
Cameron: Elise…?
Elise? Elise? Elise! [starts gently shaking Elise]
Ed: What are you
doing?
Cameron:
[shaking a little harder] Trying to wake her.
Ed: She fall
asleep again?
Cameron: In the
middle of a sentence.
Nurse: What's
happening?
Cameron:
Patient's not responding. Pulse is fine, airways open. Check her blood
pressure. [shines a light in Elise’s eye] Pupils are reactive.
Ed: Elise wake
up. You gotta wake up. [Cameron is pinching Elise’s finger] What does that
mean? What are you doing?
Cameron: She's
not responsive to pain. Come on Elise!
Ed: Is she
dying?
Cameron: I don’t
know. [looks at the monitor… realizes…] She's in a coma.
[House and the
Ducklings are walking down the hall]
House: There's
only one way a Tularemia patient goes into a coma while on IV-Chloramphenicol.
Cameron: The
patient doesn’t have Tularemia.
House: And then
there was one. Patient comes in because she's sleeping too much. It takes ten
doctors and a coma to diagnose sleeping sickness.
Foreman: And
then there was none. We still have the problem of explaining how a white chick
from Jersey who's never traveled south of D.C. has African sleeping sickness.
House: Well, the
obvious explanation?
Foreman: I made
it clear. If this guy's lying about sleeping around, he knows he's murdering
his wife.
House: Does seem
unlikely… Go away. [he enters Elise’s room]
House: [lifts
Elise's arms, drops them]
Ed: [Appears out
of nowhere] What are you doing?
House: Checking
for lymphadenopothy. And waiting for you.
Ed: Who are you?
House: I’m Dr.
House. Your wife has human African Trypanosomiasis. [Ed looks puzzled] Sleeping
sickness.
Ed: You mean its
not Tularemia. A virus, tumor or- or cancer.
House: Nope.
Ed: I’ve never
had an affair.
House: I believe
you.
Ed: And I trust
Elise.
House: The
treatment for this disease is a drug that’s… fatal on its own ten percent of
the time. [Ed looks rather scared] Which is why I need your written consent
before I can legally prescribe it.
Ed: Why would
she lie if she knew it could kill her?
House: I don’t
ask why patients lie, I just assume they all do.
Ed: But why?
House: To protect
you, because she didn’t think it mattered. It just seemed easier because…
that’s what people do. Now, If you're absolutely certain that your wife has
never had sex with anyone but you since you've been married, then I’m wrong.
But if you think there’s a possibility that just one time she wasn’t perfect…
one weekend you’re out of town… one fight when she ran to a friend, one stupid
Christmas party… then you need to allow me to start treatment. Because if we
don’t… she’s gonna be dead by tomorrow morning. [Ed thinks it over] Do you
trust your wife that much?
Ed: I don’t
know… [pause]
House: I’ll
start the treatment.
[Elise's Room.
Foreman sets down a heavy-looking briefcase and opens it to find three
syringes]
Foreman: Glass
syringes?
Chase: And
special IV tubing.
Foreman: Why do
we need this stuff?
Chase: Because
Melarsoprol melts plastic. This stuff's supposedly arsenic mixed with
antifreeze.
Foreman: What
doesn’t kill us makes us stronger, huh?
Chase: At least
you wouldn't have been so glib if you'd been prescribed Melarsoprol.
Foreman:
[reading a warning tag] “Can cause vomiting, abdominal pain, blood toxicity,
neural damage, cardiac arrhythmia…
Chase: Forgot to
say it’s gonna hurt like all hell.
Foreman: She’s
lucky she’s in a coma. [Chase injects the Melarsoprol. CGI of cells getting
“frozen”]
[Later that
night]
Ed: How long
before we know its working?
Cameron: It’s
tough to say. It’s a good sign that she hasn’t gotten any worse.
Ed: Does she
even know I'm here?
Cameron: She
knows you're always there for her.
Ed: Yeah… if she
gets better it means she wasn’t always there for me.
Cameron: It
means she made a mistake.
Ed: I can't help
it. Part of me, a big part of me… can't handle that. Doesn’t want her to get
better.
[Cameron heads
for the door] Does that make me a terrible person?
Cameron:
[hesitant] Yes.
[Elevator dings,
Wilson and House step off and make their way down the hall]
Wilson: So we're
treating her for African sleeping sickness because you don’t think it’s
possible for someone to be faithful in a relationship?
House: And you
do?
Wilson: Yes.
House: And you
need to tell me that?
Wilson: Look I’m
not having an affair. I had lunch, with someone I work with, at work. Once.
House: I believe
you. What I don’t believe is that it’ll be just once.
Wilson: I love
my wife.
House: You
certainly love saying it. [Wilson laughs in a very annoyed way] I’m sorry. I
know you love your wife. You loved all your wives. Probably still do. In fact,
you probably still love all the women you ever loved who weren’t your wives.
[They stop just outside the lab]
Wilson: You can
be a real jerk sometimes, you know that?
House: Yeah. And
you’re the good guy.
Wilson: At least
I try.
House: As long
as you’re trying to be good, you can do whatever you want.
Wilson: And as
long as you’re not trying, you can say whatever you want.
House: So
between us, we can do anything. We can rule the world!
[Wilson sighs
and leaves, House sees Cameron in the lab. He enters.]
House: Mixing up
some margaritas? Mines a double, Senorita. That’s Portuguese, you know.
Cameron:
[quietly, with a hint of tears] Spanish.
House: Uh-oh.
What’s going on?
Cameron: I’m
re-calibrating the centrifuge.
House: Turn
around. [She does, she looks very sad indeed.] It’s a very sad thing, an
un-calibrated centrifuge. It makes me cry too.
Cameron: I'm not
crying.
House: Ok. [long
pause]
Cameron: I told
the husband he was a jerk.
House: Why?
Cameron:
[hesitates] When I was in college, I… I fell in love, and I got married. And…
House: At that
age the chances of a marriage lasting--
Cameron: It
lasted six months. Thyroid cancer metastasized to his brain. There was nothing
they could do. I was 21, and… I watched my husband die.
House: I'm
sorry... But that’s not the whole story. It’s a symptom, not your illness.
Thyroid cancer would have been diagnosed at least a year before his death, you knew
he was dying when you married him. Must have been when you first met him. And
you married him anyway. You can't be that good a person and well adjusted.
Cameron: Why?
House: Because
you wind up crying over centrifuges.
Cameron: Or
hating people.
[House's pager
beeps, he hands it to Cameron. They leave]
Chase: Fever
spiked at 104. Echo shows global hyperkinesis.
House: Blood
pressure?
Chase: Barely 90
over 40.
House: You give
her gilpamine?
Chase: Started
270 micrograms per minute ten minutes ago, still no change.
[They enter
Elise's room and look hopefully at Foreman, who is shaking his head]
Chase: Killing
her parasites isn't gonna do much good if we kill her heart at the same time.
Cameron: A heart
can be replaced, a brain can't.
Chase: Right now
were killing both. [To House] If she’s gonna die, we should at least let her do
it without that acid flowing through her veins.
Ed: [enters
behind them] What’s happening?
House: We would
have expected your wife’s condition to show some improvement by now, but it
hasn’t. It’s going the other way.
Ed: [takes
Elise’s hand] Please don’t die… [stifles a sob] please don’t die… [long pause]
[Elise's heart
rate climb, and her hand moves]
Ed: She's awake!
[Ed is talking
to Elise in her room. Outside, Cameron looks through the glass window]
Foreman: Hey.
She's gonna be ok.
Cameron: Yeah,
sure. [Ed leaves the room… with his suitcase. Elise starts to cry. Cameron
catches up to Ed] What are you gonna do? Were you always honest with her? Do
you know how lucky you are? Your wife is alive, she loves you!
Ed: What she
did… you can't love a person and do that to them.
Cameron: She
LOVES you.
[Ed leaves]
[House enters
Elise's room]
House: I need to
know who you had the affair with. He has to be notified so he can get treatment
as well. [pause] Why did you lie to us? You knew your life was at stake.
Elise: He's not
coming back, is he?
House: We all
make mistakes, and we all pay a price. [pause, Elise sniffles] I need that
name.
[Cameron goes to
a house. There is a little boy sitting outside.]
Cameron: Hi… how
you doing?
Little Boy:
Fine.
Cameron: Do you
know where your dad is?
[Ed's jogging
friend comes out of the house]
Friend: Can I
help you?
[The camera pans up into a tree. End.]