"HOUSE" and other related entities are owned, (TM) and © by HEEL AND TOE FILMS and BAD HAT HARRY PRODUCTIONS in association with NBC UNIVERSAL TELEVISION. All Rights Reserved. This transcript is posted here without their permission,approval, authorization or endorsement. Any reproduction, duplication, distributionor display of this material in any form or by any means is expresslyprohibited. It is absolutely forbidden to use it for commercial gain.
========================== (Scenes opens on a track running
through the forest, Adam (son) and Doug (father) are riding on the family ATV,
whooping as they go)
Doug: All right, hold on, just
this turn up here.
[Adam whoops in delight]
Adam: Wow! How cool was that?
Doug: That was WAY cool!
[They get off the bike]
Adam: My turn!
Doug: No sorry, it's not allowed.
We just signed 15 pages of forms saying you gotta ride on the back of that
thing.
Adam: I don't see any lawyers
around.
Doug: You know that's not the
point.
Adam: No, you just want to keep
all the fun to yourself [crosses his arms over his chest] Come on, dad!
Doug: You go over 15; we're
pulling over, all right? I mean it!
Adam: You're the best!
Doug: Alright, get on there. Put
on your goggles [he sits behind his son on the ATV, Adam is very excited]
Adam: Ready?
Doug: Alright, that's my boy!
[they speed down the track, Adam
is whooping and suddenly his eyes are going funny, he looks like he's having
some kind of fit and can no longer control himself physically. He accelerates
on the ATV and doesn't seem to know himself anymore]
Doug: Adam! Don't go too fast! I
mean it! You're going too fast! Slow down!! Adam!!! [they go around a curve and
Doug falls off the back, Adam speeds on ahead] ADAM!! [he continues shouting
something I can't make out]
[Adam drives the ATV on ahead over
into a pit where the ATV bursts into flames and Adam catches on fire as well]
Doug: ADAM! ADAM! NO!!!
[OPENING CREDITS]
(Scene opens on the helipad of the
hospital on the rooftop. Adam's body is wrapped in metallic foil on a stretcher
and being wheeled into the hospital by paramedics)
Doctor: What've you got?
Paramedic: 16-yr-old, status
burnt. ATV crashed, 40% of burns on his body.
Doctor: Nasal tracheal
intervention. Start a bag of lactated ringers wide open.
Doug: Will he be ok?
Doctor: [putting on scrubs] We'll
be with you when we can. Get him out!
Doug: Wait, wait...
[Doug is pushed out of the room as
the doctors and nurses prepare to take Adam out of the protective foil. Doug
watches worriedly from outside]
(Scene cuts to House reading an Indian
medical journal in the observation deck above an empty operating theatre)
[House makes a derisive noise and
picks up what looks like a dictionary to probably translate what he just read]
House: Deia rei marki. Deia rei
marki! [pronouncing something out of the book, Foreman enters]
Foreman: Been looking for you.
House: Been avoiding you. Burn
unit can handle it.
Foreman: If they could handle it,
they wouldn't be asking for you. [Foreman takes out his mobile phone to check
something, then tosses the patient's file into House's lap. House rolls his
eyes] Is that a Journal?
House: Friend wrote an article.
Foreman: In Hindi?
House: They have a cutting edge
neuroscience program in India. Says so right on the cover [he hands it over to
Foreman and looks at the file] Kid's heart rate's a mess. [he gets up]
Foreman: Tachycardia can be
explained by the burn.
House: I assume the burn unit knew
that.
[They're walking down the corridor
and are joined by Chase and Cameron running in]
House: His potassium's low.
Foreman: Which can also be
explained by the burn.
House: Except I'm sure the burn
unit's pumping him with fluids, which means his potassium should be going up,
not down.
Foreman: Could be amphetamines.
House: Or a bacteria lunching on
his heart. Or cardial myopathy or some other very bad thing. He needs an EKG.
[They walk up the steps to a small
observatory platform and look into the next room where Adam is sedated though
you can see all the burns all over his chest and torso. It isn't a pretty
sight]
House: Eww. 'Kay, no skin, no EKG.
Chase: Is he even going to survive
the burn?
House: What have you got a date or
something? [draws a deep breath] 40% of his body, if the burns unit can prevent
an infection, his body will regenerate maybe 10%, surgeons will do 20 or so,
after 6 months in this room he'll end up with a series of nasty scars, maybe
some pain and he'll live. [some nurses in scrubs are washing Adam's burns and
scrubbing away the burnt flesh] Unless his heart shuts down because we can't
figure out what's causing the low potassium and tachycardia. We need help from
a Belgian doc named Eindhoven.
Chase: He's dead.
House: While he was alive he
invented a little ditty called the galvanometer.
Foreman: Where do we get one?
House: Go to an electronics store
that's been open since before nineteen o five. There's a good chance they got
one around the corner in the basement.
(Scene cuts to Cuddy in her
office, nurse Brenda interrupts)
Brenda: We need an audio visual
set up for the lecture hall.
Cuddy: What for?
Brenda: For the lecture.
Cuddy: What lecture?
Brenda: Dr Weber's lecture.
Cuddy: Who is Dr Weber?
Brenda: A neurologist, I think.
The memo was from you.
Cuddy: [looks immediately
suspicious and takes a look at the memo] Where is my assistant?
Brenda: She left.
Cuddy: When?
Brenda: Wednesday.
Cuddy: Seriously?
Brenda: The temp agency sent
someone, but she got lost.
Cuddy: Well, when she gets here,
fire her.
(Scene cuts to House in a coma
patient's room (same one as from Acceptance and TB or not TB methinks)
performing some kind of test. He's giving the guy in a coma something and
checking the results on a screen that's flashing with lots of blue and red
lights)
House: [seemingly pleased with the
results] Oh yeah!
Cuddy: [walks in] Did you issue
this memo?
House: Look at that.
Cuddy: [has no idea what she's
meant to see] Congratulations, the patient has been in a coma for 2 years and
counting and still in a coma. This is not my signature, I don't know anything
about this guy, I'm supposed to introduce him, have lunch? [Lots of red lights
on the screen now] The coma patient has a migraine?
House: Oh no no no no, no I gave
him medication to prevent a migraine.
Cuddy: That's a migraine,
increased flow velocity in his cerebral arteries.
House: I did subsequently give him
nitroglycerine which could possibly--
Cuddy: You induced a migraine
headache in a coma patient?!
House: Gave him a little headache,
similar to the one you're giving me now.
Cuddy: Have you even read an
ethical guideline?
House: Well if you are to try out
a new migraine prevention medication on someone who can actually feel pain...
Cuddy: Did you sign this?
House: Errr... yeah. [grabs his
cane] We can talk later about the appropriate discipline [gives a low sexy
growl and then limps out]
(Cut to Adam's body wrapped up
protectively, he's still sedated)
Cameron: Because of the burn, we
can't perform any of our normal tests to see what's wrong, so we're going to
try a galvanometer.
[Chase and Foreman are attaching
the galvanometer to Adam, attaching wires to his ankles and wrists with his
feet and hands dipped in bowls of water]
Cameron: It picks up a pulse in
the wrists and the ankles. Hopefully it'll tell us whether his heart rhythm is
abnormal.
[Cameron is in the observation
deck above with the parents]
Doug: What have I done to him?
I...
Emily: It was an accident! So...
he's got all these burns and err... and now there's something wrong with his
heart?
Cameron: We're trying to figure
out if the two were somehow connected. Had he been sick lately?
Emily: [both shake their heads]
No, nothing.
Cameron: Anything unusual with his
behaviour, had he been tired a lot?
Emily: Nothing.
Doug: He was great, he was happy,
he was just having a great time and then...
Cameron: If he was experimenting
with amphetamines or cocaine..?
Emily: No. We gave him some pot
about a year ago to try--
Doug: It was just once. We thought
if we took the mystery out of drugs and alcohol, the less he'd experiment.
Cameron: We'll know more after the
test.
Doug: It looks like they're going
to electrocute him [panics]
[In the room below]
Foreman: Plug it in.
Chase: You plug it in.
Foreman: Fine, give me the cord.
[he plugs it in, the galvanometer starts drawing the heart waves on to the
paper] Works. Prominent U waves.
Chase: And a bit of T wave. No
eczema.
Foreman: Q wave normal. [looks
again] That's not good.
[Adam suddenly starts to have a
seizure]
Foreman: Chase! Turn it off! Turn
it off!
Doug: What's happening?
Emily: What is that?
Chase: [into the intercom]
Anesthetist get in here.
[Emily and Doug keep shouting as
Cameron leaves the observation deck. Adam continues with his seizure]
(Cut to the Ducklings in front of
the whiteboard in the conference room)
House: [walking in] Who
electrocuted my patient?
Foreman: He had a seizure.
Cameron: He wasn't electrocuted.
House: [searching through some
books on his shelves] What does the seizure tell us? [turns around to see Chase
leaning against the desk] Move.
Cameron: What are you looking for?
House: Same as you - love,
acceptance, solid return on investment. [searching the papers on the desk]
Differential diagnosis, go.
Chase: Could be epilepsy or
seizure disorder?
Cameron: Not with the tachycardia.
It could be a virus in his brain.
Chase: Specificity is impressive.
Adrenolukodystrophy.
Foreman: Could be MS, seizures
could be caused by plaques and lesions on the brain.
House: [finally finds the file he
was looking for on another table and picks it up] Well let's find out which,
get an MRI. [walks out]
Foreman: No nuclear imaging.
[House walks back] He wouldn't survive the move to radiology. MRI and CT scan
are both out.
House: [big sigh] Ok. Lumbar
puncture will tell us if his proteins are elevated and at least we can exclude
MS. [walks out again]
Chase: Can't do a lumbar puncture
either. [House walks back in again]
House: You're cramping my exits.
Don't tell me, no skin on his spine.
Chase: We'd be inserting a needle
into an area that's teeming with bacteria. If he doesn't have a brain infection
already, we'd give him one for sure.
Cameron: There's no other way to
look at a brain.
House: Transcranial doppler
sonography.
Foreman: She said brain, not
pregnant woman's uterus. They do sound alike.
House: I used one to look at a
brain this morning.
Foreman: Why didn't you take the
patient to radiology, get an MRI?
House: [looks behind to check if
anyone's listening in] Obviously I was doing something illegal and using
nuclear imaging would have raised questions.
Foreman: You're not going to get a
diagnosis of MS from a sonogram!
House: Not definitively, but
patients with MS have more reactive neurons in their occipital cortex. [he
walks out yet again, but quickly peers back in] Ok then.
(Cut to Cuddy speaking in front of
people at the lecture theatre)
Cuddy: Thank you for all coming to
today's lecture by Dr Phillip Weber. Who is our guest today. At out hospital,
to talk about... headaches. Dr Weber is at the Weber Center for Pain, that
makes sense. [mutters]Weber, Weber. Erm, so please welcome Dr Weber.
[audience claps, camera pans to
House sitting alone wearing his trucker cap from Sports Medicine, a green
jacket, and sunglasses]
Weber: Thank you Dr... [pretends
to check his file] Cuddy. [audience laughs. Cuddy pretends to smile but spares
House a glare before exiting the lecture theatre] I suppose I should tell you
err... a little bit more about myself.
[Wilson enters the hall and sits
down next to House, he stares at House's strange outfit]
Weber: I went to school in
Virginia. [hear him in the background]
Wilson: You've never been to one
of these things in your life, who is this guy?
House: [shrugs] No idea.
Wilson: What's with the outfit?
House: Sudden chills, and light
sensitivity. Inexplicable.
Weber: I received my medical
degree at Johns Hopkins University, where I studied under Brightman and Gilmar.
Wilson: [looks thoughtful] Hmm! He
must be good. You went to Hopkins and studied under Brightman and Gilmar.
House: Shhh...
Weber: This helped me to win the
Doyle internship at the Mayo Clinic.
Wilson: You were supposed to get
the Doyle internship. [he looks between House and Weber, suddenly realising]
This guy's von Lieberman?! The guy got you thrown out for cheating?
House: The Dean threw me out. Von
Lieberman just ratted on me.
Wilson: This guy's name is Weber,
not von Lieberman.
House: I call him Weber von
Lieberman. Way eviler. Shh.
Weber: --and the receptors have
improved the acute treatment of migraines. To this point, the prevention of--
[in the background]
Wilson: So what's the plan? You
going to wait 'til he bends over then make a fart sound?
House: I'm not here about the
past, he's a bad scientist.
Wilson: Well you cheated off him,
how bad can he be?
House: He got the answer wrong.
(Foreman and Chase and a male
nurse preparing Adam for the sonogram. Male nurse is opening up Adam's eyes
with metal propping-things to keep his eyes open. Parents and Cameron watching
from the observation deck)
Doug: Are they trying to wake him
up? They can't do that, right? He'd be in too much pain.
Cameron: Don't worry, he's still
under, but the brain never completely sleeps, it's always working. Controlling
your heart rate, breathing, temperature.
[Chase holds up cards with
pictures on them in front of Adam's eyes, Foreman checks the effects on a
screen and shakes his head]
Cameron: The eyes respond to
visual stimuli, blood flow increases in certain areas in the brain and we
contract that with the sonogram. With MS, blood vessels are more reactive so
flow is faster. If Adam has an infection, they'd be swelling which would
constrict the arteries, and the flow would be slower.
Foreman: [looks concerned] Chase.
In the subarachnoid space. [Chase looks at the screen in alarm]
(Cut to Weber's lecture)
Weber: [writing on the whiteboard]
Data from control subjects were analysed in a two-way anova with status and
sinh within subject factors.
Wilson: Uhh... you stalked this
guy for 20 years just for this shot to humiliate him?
House: Shh! I'm trying to learn.
Weber: --vessels without
significant rebound. [background]
House: He doesn't even know what
that means.
Wilson: You're going to interrupt
him, aren't you?
House: If I have a question.
Wilson: And what's that going to
accomplish?
House: Why can't you just enjoy
this? Why can't you just be happy for me?
Wilson: You have got to find less
debilitating outlets than humiliating people! I... hear bowling is more fun
than stalking.
House: But I'm better at this.
Weber: If P is less than point
zero... [door to the lecture theatre opens; Foreman quickly spots House and
softly reports on Adam]
Wilson: Blow a ton of money on a
plasma TV.
Foreman: We found a subarachnoid
bleed.
House: Bleed in the head isn't
causing seizures.
Wilson: It could be. 10% would
damage the cerebral cortex and have seizure.
Foreman: Or bacterial meningitis.
Wilson: Viral encephalitis?
Foreman: There's no way to tell
without--
House: [slightly too loud] Shut
up!
Weber: [stops and turns around]
Excuse me?
House: Not you.
Weber: You know if my lecture is
interrupting your meeting I can wait.
House: Bahatchat kria. [Wilson
furrows his eyebrows in confusion] As your people say in India, 'preciate it.
[to Foreman] We'll figure out why later. And fix the bleed or he dies. Talk to
you in a couple of hours [Foreman leaves, to Weber] Terimaki [he puts his hands
together and nods his head in a gesture that clearly is supposed to mean thank
you. The expression of confusion on Wilson's face is priceless.]
(Cut back to Adam)
[Chase is inserting a wire into
Adam's femoral artery, Foreman is controlling the sonogram]
Chase: I'm in the subarachnoid
space.
Foreman: Can you get it?
Chase: Think so. [After a moment]
Put the probe back where I can see the wire!
Foreman: We're looking for the
bleed--
Chase: Look when I get there! I'm
flying blind without a contrast CT here!
(Cut back to Weber's lecture)
Weber: And with a P value of less
than point zero zero one, we have strong statistical evidence that this drug
prevents migraine headaches without daily administration.
House: Err... excuse me doctor.
Wilson: [mutters to House] He
knows his field better than you do.
House: It's always been my
understanding that err, unless you follow a daily regimen, no drug can prevent
a migraine.
Weber: That's why they call it a
breakthrough.
House: That's why YOU call it a
breakthrough.
Weber: No, the... err
pharmaceutical company sponsoring my clinical trials also hails it as a
breakthrough.
House: I'm sure your wife and
lawyer do too. Is there anybody who doesn't stand to make a fortune from it
calling a breakthrough?
Weber: Who are you?
Wilson: [mutters to House] Just a
lunatic who desperately needs a hobby.
House: And how exactly did these
studies work? You give this drug to a bunch of people and if they don't get a
migraine you go "voila, my drug works"? [points to a lady sitting a
few rows below him] Erm, excuse me miss, uh do you have cancer? [she frowns in
disbelief and shakes her head; House looks back up at Weber] Wow! [he points to
the bottle she's been drinking from] Mango juice prevents cancer!
Weber: Uh perhaps I should have
taken my medication before this lecture.
[House gives an incredibly loud
and high-pitched fake laugh]
Weber: We had a very specific
control group. Chronic migraine sufferers, I don't have time to go through all
the maths right now but the incidence was dramatically--
House: Sure, in India. Two plus
two equals five there, right?
Weber: Do I know you?
House: I know your math skills.
They blow.
Wilson: [mutters] Touché.
Weber: You sound very familiar.
House: Why did you publish it in
an obscure journal in India? Why not publish it in really really cool hit cases
of South Philly?
Weber: Neuroscience New Delhi is a
respected journal.
House: Yeah. The guy running Slurp
'N' Gulp tells me its one of the best.
Wilson: [mutters to House] Get a
hooker. Anything.
House: See I'm thinking that
publishing studies is probably the easiest way to get a pharmaceutical company
to give you a reach around. And choosing a journal that no one can actually
read well that's... that's shrewd. [Wilson is going facepalm beside him]
Weber: [has been walking up the
steps closer and closer to House] I know I know you.
House: Sure you do. Dick.
Weber: The name's Phillip.
House: Oh, my bad. Something to do
with your face. I always think your name is Dick.
Weber: [realises] House?!
House: Here.
Weber: Medical school was 20 years
ago, give it a rest, grow up.
House: Yeah, you were always the
grown-up. Do the responsible thing. Tattle tail!
Weber: You cheated!
House: I cheated then, you're
cheating now! Your drug doesn't work.
Weber: Oh yes, you would like to
believe that because it plays right in to your fantasy.
House: I tested it.
Weber: Oh really? What were your
parameters? Where's your study?
House: [quickly looks over at
Wilson] Room 2134.
Weber: One patient?
Wilson: [blurts out] The coma
patient? [House gives Wilson a look]
Weber: You haven't changed a bit.
You took shortcuts in Med school, you're taking shortcuts now. You cannot test
this on an abnormal brain.
House: That's so close-minded.
He's not abnormal, he's... special.
Weber: Cerebral cortex atrophies
in coma patients. You need live conscious people. You don't know everything,
House.
(Cut to Chase and Foreman in the
room with the hyperbaric chamber, Adam is inside)
Foreman: Something that disrupts
brain function. Plaques are perfect, interrupt neuron communication.
Chase: MS?
Foreman: No. MS is complicated, I
think this is more basic. It's just tachycardia and seizures. How much longer
the burn unit guys gonna keep him in that thing?
Cameron: [enters with scrubs on]
Lecture's over, let's go. House wants to-- [she peers into the hyperbaric
chamber and can see Adam's eyelids flicking open and close] Adam's waking up.
Foreman: [into the intercom] Get
the anesthesiologist in here now!
Cameron: He's in pain.
Foreman: [looks in through the
other window in the chamber] That's not pain. [back into the intercom] Need
some help in here.
[In the chamber, Adam's gasping,
his body is arching slightly and his eyelids are still flickering]
(Cut to House in his office)
[He ties a band around his upper
arm and takes out a needle with which he injects some of Weber's miraculous
migraine medicine into his own bloodstream. He reaches for the next bottle -
nitroglycerin (which causes severe migraines) and he injects a measure of that
into himself too. Loosening the band around his arm and taking it off, he sits
back in his chair as Cameron enters the office]
Cameron: Adam had an orgasm.
House: What? You mean while he was
se-- [he suddenly gasps in the middle of the word and slams his hand down hard
on to the table. Cameron jumps a little in surprise. House's expression could
really either be interpreted as immense pleasure of the orgasmic variety, or
immense pain]
Cameron: What's wrong?
House: I'm having a migraine.
Cameron: Are you ok?
House: Hah. Yes. I was right. [a
strong burst of pain hits him hard and he groans before pushing his clenched
fists against his forehead]
(Cut to later, House in his
office, all the blinds have been pulled to cover the place in darkness)
[Foreman is there using another
needle to inject House with help for his migraine]
Foreman: It'll knock you out for a
couple of hours.
House: [weakly] No, I got work to
do. Just give me sumatriptan for the pain and Verapamil so it doesn't recur. I
heard the patient had fun in the hyperbaric chamber.
Foreman: Yeah.
House: Gotta schedule me some time
in there.
Foreman: [takes the bottle of
Weber's cure from House's hand] Weber's meds aren't even legal in the US.
House: It’s legal in India. I was
disoriented.
[Foreman finishes with the
injections and House tries to stand up]
Foreman: Err moving around is a
bad idea. Hey if you feel chest pain you need to let me know. Verapamil can
cause congestive heart failure.
House: Nothing can hurt my heart.
[He enters into the conference
room, Chase and Cameron immediately get up to switch off the lights and draw
the blinds for House]
Foreman: Hey you're going to feel
some dizziness, definitely going to be constipated.
House: Differential diagnosis for
getting off. [sits himself down on a chair at the big table]
Cameron: Is he going to be ok?
Foreman: No, something's seriously
wrong with him. [He draws a circle on the side of his forehead in the
almost-universal gesture of a crazy person]
House: [pushes the chair aside and
lies down on the floor under the table] Different diagnosis for ejaculation.
[he takes a huge book off the table top and uses it as a pillow] Don't make me
say that again.
Foreman: We're not stalling you,
we just don't know. [The Ducklings all take seats around where their mentor
lies]
House: Then guess.
Cameron: Could pain medication
cause an orgasm?
House: I wish.
Chase: Maybe pain caused the
orgasm. You get a tattoo; the brain releases endorphins which create pleasure.
Cameron: Most people don't orgasm
from a needle prick.
House: Actually Chase has a point;
the brain is like a huge train station. If the switches get-- [looks like the
pain is back full swing, he gasps] you're the neurologist, talk for me.
Foreman: If sensory information
got misinterpreted by the medial forebrain bundle, it's possible for bad to
feel good and good to feel bad.
House: He's a lucky kid. Let's not
fix him until the burns heal.
Chase: So what attacks the medial
forebrain bundle?
Foreman: Infected neuropathies,
vasculitic neuropathies
Cameron: Crab's disease,
metachromatic leukodystrophy.
House: All very bad things. No way
to look for any of them in his condition.
Cameron: Could be an infection.
Foreman: I said infection about 8
seconds ago.
Cameron: You listed some brain
infections, but what if it's just a regular old infection festering in the
burned skin?
Foreman: Pus on his arm isn't
causing problems in the forebrain.
Cameron: He's on 20 different
medications to manage his pain and his heart, how often he urinates. His brain
is like a waiter that’s got too many--
House: Heyy! I do the metaphors.
Cameron: [sighs] The brain is
stressed. An infection's elsewhere could put it over the edge.
Foreman: So we just wait for his burns
to heal to see if you're right? If you're wrong, he doesn't have that kind of
time.
House: Dominic Larry.
Chase: He another dead doctor?
House: He was Napoleon's Surgeon
in Chief. Cleaned a lot of battle wounds.
Foreman: By amputating legs.
House: And with bugs.
(Cut to maggots being placed on
Adam's chest all over his burns)
Cameron: Maggots are implanted
directly into Adam's burns.
Doug: Maggots... they eat dead
people, I...
Cameron: Maggots eat dead flesh,
only dead flesh, so they're perfectly suited to clean wounds. They also kill
the bacteria that thrive in injured tissues.
[Parents are looking fairly
disgusted at the maggots crawling all over their son]
(Cut to House sitting in his
office looking very haggard. He looks at his red coffee mug across the room and
slowly gets up and limps along with his cane to try and get it)
[Wilson enters the office with a
rather loud clanging of the blinds in place]
House: Ohh! [he grimaces]
Wilson: [standing there with hands
on his hips] Dr Jekyll I presume, they found a half-eaten sheep in the zoo,
police wanna ask you a few questions.
House: [points at the mug] Need
something to wash it down.
Wilson: Coffee? Bad idea. [raises
his voice deliberately so the volume almost sounds like shouting - obviously
he's trying to torture poor House with his migraine] You're better off with
water.
House: Coffee's closer.
Wilson: [grabs the mug before
House and dashes off into the conference room] Fool-proof plan by the way.
Either his meds would work and you'd be in psychic pain because von Evil is
going to be rich; or they wouldn't, and you got to be in agony all day. [Wilson
pours a glass of water for House, but takes all the teaspoons on the counter
and dumps them into the sink deliberately with a LOUD clang. House grimaces
again] Perfect lose-lose situation. Very you.
House: I had to prove--
Wilson: You proved nothing. [he
hands House the glass of water]
House: Right. This isn't a
migraine.
Wilson: Yeah. Dear New England
Journal of Medicine, I took this guy's drug and still got a headache thus
scientifically proving that my archenemy is an idiot. You just wanted the pain.
House: The meds are supposed to
prevent migraine.
Wilson: You get distracted by
pain, leaves less room for the things you don't want to think about, like the
Flyers sucking or the price of gas or... ohh, the fact that you pushed the love
of your life out of your life.
House: God I wish the pain [turns his
head to give Wilson a pointed look] would go away.
Wilson: Next time you need to get
your mind off, stick a needle into your eye. It's less annoying to the rest of
us when you can still walk. [Wilson walks out; House grimaces once again at the
sound of the blinds]
(Cut to the next morning, House is
lying asleep on the floor)
Cameron: Did you sleep here?
House: [suddenly wakes up and
looks at the Ducklings all looking worriedly at him] Lower.
Cameron: [whispers] Do you want a
pillow?
House: Not softer, lower.
Frequency of your voice is grating.
Foreman: You should have been
better by now.
House: I'm super. Patient?
Cameron: The maggots did great for
the burn [sighs] but the brainwaves are still all over the map.
House: Which means your regular
old infection isn't causing his brain dysfunction, which means there's an
underlying condition which means we gotta get inside his head. Do a lumbar
puncture.
Chase: We've already established
that we can't get a lumbar puncture.
House: C2, C3.
Foreman: No, no, NO way. I only
saw a cervical tap once and that guy got paralysed.
House: Ask the parents if they
prefer to have their son in a wheelchair, or dead.
(Cut to Foreman talking to the
parents)
Foreman: Something's causing his
brain to lose control. Eventually it'll shut off. We need to do a lumbar
puncture to get some of the fluid in his spine so we can test it.
Emily: You need us to sign a
consent?
Foreman: I have to warn you,
there's a serious risk of paralysis, or death.
Doug: Are you saying we shouldn't
do this?
Foreman: You have to do this.
Emily: Then why are you telling us
what can go wrong?
Foreman: I just think you should
know.
Emily: Either you're cruel or this
is a way for you to cover your ass incase you cripple our son!
Doug: This isn't his fault.
Emily: No it's not; it’s yours,
that's what you keep telling me! My son is lying in there half-dead I am just
trying to find a way to get through this. [she signs the form quickly]
Doug: I'm sorry.
Emily: Yeah, I know. [she walks
off]
(Cut to Adam, the last of the
maggots are removed and they turn him on his side. Foreman starts to perform
the cervical tap)
Foreman: Needle. [Chase passes it
to him]
[Foreman tries to push it in but
it won't go through]
Foreman: It’s not going in.
Chase: Don't force it.
Foreman: I'm going one space
higher.
Chase: It's too close to his brain
stem, it'll herniate. [Foreman looks determined] You're going to paralyse him!
Foreman: Not helping! [the
monitors start beeping]
Chase: His blood pressure's
spiking, stop!
Foreman: I'm getting it.
Chase: He's 180 over 120, he's
going to stroke!
Foreman: I'm in the space, give me
the vial. [Chase quickly does so and they collect the spinal fluid. The
monitors stop beeping]
(Cut to House sitting alone on the
balcony, a blanket covering the lower half of his body. He looks tired and
haggard)
[Foreman walks out to join him]
Foreman: He doesn't have MS or an
infection.
House: His proteins aren't
elevated?
Foreman: Wrong protein. IGM, not
IGG. Elevation was probably caused by the bleed.
House: What if there was tingling
in his extremities prior to the crash?
Foreman: How can you still be on
MS?
House: I gotta be on something. Something's
interrupting his neurons chitchat like lesions.
Foreman: We can't scan for them,
the only test we can do, we just did and it was negative. He has no tingling,
no numbness. And you read his history, parents didn't say anything about--
House: What about Adam?
Foreman: We can't look into his
brain but you want us to read his mind?
House: Good point.
(Cut to some doctors/nurses taking
care of Adam, House walks in with scrubs on)
House: Yeah, you can finish the
sponge bath in a minute.
Anesthesiologist: They're just
re-doing his dressings. He's out. He's fine.
[some of the little doctors move
out of the room]
House: I didn't page you to put
him out; I paged you to wake him up. Why are these lights so damn bright?
[one of the little doctors
switches off some of the lights and leaves House and the Anesthesiologist
together with Adam]
House: Thank you. Come on, I need
to talk to him.
Anesthesiologist: House, you can't
wake up a burn victim to play 20 questions. It's torture.
House: He won't remember.
Anesthesiologist: He's going to be
in extraordinary pain!
House: God you're good, you're
putting me to sleep! I know he's going to be in pain, I know you disapprove,
I'm his attending. Wake him up.
[The Anesthesiologist looks pissed
but reluctantly injects something to wake Adam up. Adam's eyes slowly flicker
open. He looks overwhelmed with pain]
Adam: Oh my god!
House: I'm Doctor House.
Adam: It hurts!
House: It's going to get a lot
worse so answer fast. Before the accident did you experience any numbness or
tingling in your fingers? [Adam looks down at the burns on his chest, he's
panicking and scared and in a LOT of pain] You got burned, it's healing. I need
an answer!
Adam: It really hurts!
House: Any tingling in your arms
or legs?
Adam: Can you do something? I
can't..!
House: Adam! You gotta listen to
me! Did you feel anything?
Adam: [screams in pain] Pissed my
pants and... then... I don't remember [screams again very loudly, they inject
something to sedate him again]
(Cut to House walking out into the
corridors still with scrubs on. Cameron is waiting for him)
Cameron: Is he ok?
House: Get everyone in my office.
[he limps past her]
Cameron: Where are you going?
House: Kid's screaming gave me a
headache. Gotta take an aspirin.
(Cut to the SHOWER SCENE)
[House is naked under the shower;
we see him very wet and relaxing under the shower spray. The shower goes off,
he pulls the towel from the top of the door and opens the door. He steps out
and wraps the towel around his waist, then limps to sit down on the bench in
the locker room. He hunches over and rests his arms on his knees then stares
down at the floor. A droplet of water from his face drops to the floor and
turns a bright blue colour. This then proceeds to turn red and look very
psychedelic and has 3D bubbling things]
Cameron: House, you ok? We've been
waiting for you.
House: [slowly looks up at her]
I'm hallucinating.
Cameron: [she puts her stuff down
hurriedly] Hallucinations with migraines are pretty uncommon. [she checks his
pupils] What did you see?
House: I saw music.
Cameron: Sensory deception makes
no sense.
House: Shhh... [we see Cameron
from House's eyes, she's all blurred up. We also hear her from House's ears and
she echoes badly]
Cameron: You took something. The
kid's fighting for his life!
[House looks very high and doesn't
seem to really care at all. She walks out in a huff, House lies back against
the wall in his high state]
(Cut to Cameron in the conference
room, Foreman and Chase walk in)
Foreman: Hey, you find him?
Cameron: He was hallucinating in
the locker room.
Foreman: He ok?
Cameron: He's feeling no pain, he
is high.
Chase: Vicodin high?
Cameron: Past that. He's seeing
sounds. Took something.
[Suddenly, House walks in. He
looks alert and completely out of pain as well as definitely not being high
either]
House: Why's it so dark in here?
Beautiful day outside, open the shades, let the sun shine in.
Cameron: Its night time.
House: It’s still Tuesday, right?
Foreman: You look better.
House: I took something.
Foreman: Mind if I ask what?
House: Err... a little of this,
little of that. And I was wrong with our patient, he's depressed.
Cameron: He told you that when you
woke him up?
House: Nope. Told me he pissed his
pants and he blacked out.
Foreman: That's not diagnostic of
depression. Lack of appetite, isolating yourself--
House: Uncontrollable urination
and blacking out are good predictors of what?
Cameron: Seizure.
House: Which means the seizure he
had when you tested his heart was at least a second seizure.
Foreman: So what? Depression and
seizures aren't correlated.
House: No, but you know what is?
Depression and anti-depression medicine.
Chase: Tox screen was clean.
House: Yeah, but you know how much
crap he's got in his system from dealing with those burns, the guy could have
the Spanish Armada floating through his bloodstream and we wouldn't know about
it. Until they started firing cannons.
Foreman: Antidepressants have been
known to cause seizures in kids but not orgasms. This is a brain in trouble.
House: This is a brain with too
much serotonin.
Cameron: Serotonin affects mood,
appetite, it doesn't cause a brain to shut down.
House: Antidepressants fake brains
into thinking they have more serotonin than they actually do. Every 10 million
or so cases, sets off a chain reaction. Produces too much, enough to fry
itself.
Foreman: If Adam has Serotonin
Storm, it’s deadly.
Chase: But treatable.
Cyproheptadine.
Cameron: Unless he doesn't have
Serotonin Storm, he could just as easily have too much dopamine as serotonin,
but if it's dopamine the cyproheptadine will kill him.
[House is about walk out of the
office]
Chase: Where are you going?
House: Going to talk to the kid
again, seems nice.
Cameron: You can't.
House: Why? Did he say he doesn't
like me?
Cameron: Anesthesiologist told the
parents what you did.
House: Everyone's a tattle tail
[he switches off the lights in the office and leaves]
(House walks up to the parents
sitting together on a couch)
House: Is your son depressed?
Emily: No, who are you?
House: I'm doctor House.
Emily: Oh you're the idiot who
thought that--
Doug: I heard him screaming all
the way down the hallway!
House: If I didn't wake him, I
wouldn't have learned what caused the crash. We think he had a seizure.
Doug: [long pause] This wasn't my
fault?
House: Well if he hadn't had the
brain problem, he wouldn't have the burns. On the other hand, if you hadn't put
him on the ATV, he also wouldn't have the burns. You can debate your personal
responsibility after I leave. I need to wake him up again. I need to know if
he's taking antidepressants.
Emily: He's not.
Doug: He's the happiest kid I
know.
House: But you don't know, do you?
Doug: He's my son.
House: Hmm... that's sorta my
point. At sixteen, they'll tell anyone anything, except their parents.
Emily: Adam talks to us about
everything.
House: Yeah, I know about the pot
and the cocaine.
Emily: There was never... cocaine!
House: You sure? Are you having
him followed?
Emily: He told us when he got
drunk at a party; he told us when he started having sex--
House: Sixteen. Way to go.
Emily: He told us when he cheated
on a math test; he told us when his girlfriend cheated on him! He doesn't hide
anything from us.
House: But if he was depressed...
Emily: He'd tell us. We don't
judge, he's not depressed, we're sure.
House: Bet-his-life-on-it sure?
Just hypothetically.
Doug: Yeah.
House: Okay.
(Cut to House walking back to the
Ducklings in the conference room)
House: Kid's happy. Happy happy
happy.
Cameron: Then we're back to where
we started. Seizure disorders.
House: Seizure disorders aren't
causing orgasms.
Chase: Vascular malformations?
House: Would have seen it on the
sonogram.
Foreman: Hepatic encephalopathy?
House: [shakes his head] Liver
enzyme tests were normal. [he looks like he's thought of something and gets up
to go out again]
Cameron: Where are you going?
House: To take a leak.
(Cut to Adam's room, House has
scrubbed in and is washing his hands in the prep room)
[The parents anxiously walk in]
Doug: What are you doing?
House: Can't come in here, you're
not sterile.
Emily: Don't touch our son, we
told you!
House: Seriously, millions of
bacteria, microbes on you. He'll die of sepsis.
Emily: If you go in there...
[House tauntingly steps into the
room backwards while the parents watch him; Doug quickly runs off and runs back
down the corridor with Foreman]
Doug: I think he's going to wake
him up again!
Foreman: I know he is. [he rushes
into the prep room and quickly tries to wash his hands] House! You can't do
this!
House: Oh if I had a nickel for
every time I've heard that. Relax. Are they going to sue us? If I'm right, I
save his life. If I'm wrong, he's dead no matter what I do. Either way, how
much have I really hurt them? [House has loaded up a syringe with whatever it
is he plans to inject Adam with]
Emily: [from outside the room]
Leave him alone!
[Foreman runs in and places
himself next to the kid, desperately trying to stop House]
House: You're not sterile, do you
want to kill the kid?
Foreman: Give me the syringe.
House: [prepares to use the
syringe] No pain, no gain.
Foreman: Hey! [he grabs House's
arm] You gotta stop this!
House: [has paused by that point
and is inspecting something on Adam's wrist] They're right, he's not depressed.
Foreman: Yeah sure, I'm not
letting you go until you give me that syringe.
House: What's that on his wrist?
Foreman: [looks down at it - it's
a circular burn mark on Adam's wrist in the middle of what is otherwise
unblemished skin] A burn.
House: Why on his wrist?
Foreman: Why not on his wrist?
House: His back, his torso,
everything's a mess, forearms are clean. Except right there.
Foreman: So what?
House: It's a perfect circle.
Foreman: So a drop of burning
gasoline fell on his wrist, a screw from the ATV [he manages to finally get the
syringe from House]
House: Maybe. [he inspects Adam's
fingers and finds a yellow nicotine stain on the side of Adam's middle finger]
(Cut to House walking out of
Adam's room - he doesn't have his cane and is grabbing his leg as he limps)
Emily: Why are you torturing him?
House: Does your son smoke?
Doug: I'd kill him.
House: [smiles] So, he talks to
you about sex, crack, anything except cigarettes. He has a cigarette burn on
his wrist, also a fading nicotine stain between two fingers. Bad news, your son
has a filthy unhealthy habit. Good news, he's trying to quit. Bad news, the
quitting is killing him. Good news, I can cure him. Bad news... nope, that's
the end of it.
Emily: Quitting smoking can kill?
House: No-smoke meds are
antidepressants. Crappy ones you can get over the internet are loaded with
whatever antidepressants they can get cheap, pisses mommy and daddy off so they
can't take him to a pediatrician. [Foreman walks out and hands House his cane]
Sorry I was wrong about him being depressed. [to Foreman] Treat him.
(Cut to House playing with the
ball as he sits in his chair in the office staring out the window)
Cuddy: [walking in] Hey, did you
drop acid?
House: [swivels his chair around]
Why would I do that?
Cuddy: To annoy me, or maybe
because you're miserable, or... because you... want to self-destruct. Pick one.
House: How about because LSD acts
on serotonin receptors in the brain which can stop a migraine in its tracks?
I'm just saying that's also a possibility. How did you know about it?
Cuddy: Cameron is worried about
you. I told her that LSD lasts up to 12 hours; if you were functional she must
be wrong.
House: Well, either that or I also
took a whole bunch of antidepressants which short-circuited the LSD. I'm just
saying that would also explain it.
[Weber suddenly bursts into
House's office angrily]
Weber: Thank you for ruining my
clinical trials. Pharmaceutical company is shutting me down.
House: You're kidding, really?
Weber: How could that surprise
you? You sent them an email complaining about my math, telling them about your
stunt.
House: I didn't know people
actually read emails. The delete button is so conveniently located--
Weber: So what's next? You going
to follow me my whole life? Torture me?
House: Why would I do that?
Weber: You waited 20 years to do
this. What's next? Break up my marriage?
House: No. We're even.
Weber: Right. [he starts to walk
out, then looks at Cuddy] Oh thanks, for setting me up. [he walks out, Cuddy
gives a disbelieving look]
House: An eye for an eye, LSD and
antidepressants. Everything in balance. [he starts tossing the ball into the
air and then catching it] Buddhists call it karma and Christians call it the
golden rule, Jews call it... [Cuddy gives inquiring look] I don't know. Rabbi
Hillel said something poignant. Universe always settles the score.
Cuddy: Does it?
House: No, but it should.
(Cut to Adam on his bed looking
much better, parents standing outside the room looking in)
Doug: Do you think you'll ever be
able to look at him and not blame me?
Emily: Yeah. Will you?
[Adam opens his eyes and turns
over to look at them. They all smile at each other]
(Cut to House sitting alone in his
home. its night time, he's fiddling with his cane)
[There's a knock at the door.
House finishes his drink (brandy?) and gets up. He hesitates a moment at the
door before opening it. We see from the back that the person standing at the
door has long black hair]
Stranger at the door: I'm Paula.
House: Hey Paula.
[We now see Paula who is a
beautiful young lady]
Paula: How you doing? You work
over at the college? Or are you full-time over at the--
House: I'm looking for a
distraction. You don't need to talk to do that, do you?
[Paula smiles, shakes her head and
walks in; House closes the door behind her]
END