04x15 - Transition

Episode transcripts for the TV show, "Emergency!". Aired: January 15, 1972 – May 28, 1977.*
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Series follows two rescuers, who work as paramedics and firefighters in the Los Angeles metropolitan area.
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04x15 - Transition

Post by bunniefuu »

Live Oak Canyon.

It's blocked off,
road construction.

[sums]

All right, Iron Canyon.

Yeah? Mud slide.

JOHNNY: Detour, two miles.

Okay, we'll take
good care of it.

All right, so long.

ROY: All right, I got it.

I just had a call from the
paramedic training coordinator.

You're getting
a trainee next week.

Huh. Anybody we know?

Oh, I don't think so. His department
just got incorporated into the county.

Does Gil Robinson ring a bell?

I don't know him.

Well, huh.

I once knew a Gil
Robinson in high school.

I don't know whether
he's a fireman or not.

Oh, you'll find out soon enough.

He finishes up at the hospital this week,
and he starts with us on Wednesday.

Huh.

Bear Canyon.

Bear Canyon.

Bear Canyon.

You know,
the Gil Robinson that I knew

was a state pole vault champion.

Really nice guy.
Kind of liked him.

Huh.

I don't know whether
it's him or not.

[ALARM SOUNDING]

DISPATCHER:
Station 51, man trapped.


3958 Martin Street.
Cross street, Washington.


3958 Martin.

Time out, 0950.

Station 51, KMG 365.

[SIRENS BLARING]

[HORN BLARING]

Help!

[COUGHING]

Hurry, hurry up! Oh, he's stuck!

He's stuck. He is
my husband. All right.

He's in the kitchen.
All right, all right.

Just calm down. Tell this gentleman
right here what your problem is.

Yes, ma'am. It's my husband.

He's stuck. He's in the kitchen.

And he just kept saying,
"Pour more acid, pour more acid."

And it began to sputter
and smoke and...

Yeah, we better use air masks.

Chet, turn off the water.
Marco, cut the power, pal.

Use air masks,
bring the reel line in.

You know, he told me to just
keep pouring the sulfuric acid

on top of these
caustic soda crystals.

And then I screwed down
the top of the garbage disposal

and, suddenly, before I knew it,
the whole thing just blew all apart.

Yes, ma'am, that'|| do it.

Looks like we got
hydrogen sulfide in there.

[MAN SCREAMING]

[MAN COUGHING]

[GLASS SHATTERING]

Hey, watch it, there's acid
spattering underneath the sink here.

Yeah.

Jammed underneath
here pretty good. Yeah.

You give it a try here.

Yeah.

Are you hurt anywhere?
MAN: It's my leg.

Your leg? The sink is on it.

[MAN SCREAMING]

All right, all right,
take it easy. Just take it easy.

All right, no good.

Listen, this water is
reacting with the acid in here.

All right.

I'll see if I can tear something out
of here to deflect some of that acid.

Okay, we'll put this between
the pipe and his leg, Cap.

Roy,
see if you can wrap these around the pipe.

Yeah.

[MAN COUGHING]

Looks like he's got
a broken femur.

There's lot of swelling
around the impact area.

Is there any way we
can get this off of him?

Let's give it another try.

All right.

[GRUNTING]

It's too heavy.

Okay, don't bring that
reel line any further.

Chet, get the Porta Power,
will you, pal?

Marco, give us a hand over here.
See if all of us can move this counter.

STANLEY: Get ready, get a hold!

[GRUNTING] Heave!

[MAN SHOUTING]

It's just not doing any good.

[MARCO GROANS]

STANLEY: You okay, Marco?

MARCO: I got acid
under my glove.

STANLEY: All right,
come over here.

Now, hose it off.

Let's wait for the
Porta Power. All right.

Still jammed, huh?

Here, let's put it on this corner
here. I think this will support it.

Think we got it all off.

You'll be all right. Here,
let's get the brace in there.

A little bit more.

Okay, it's coming,
but take it easy.

There's standing
water in the pipes.

All right,
I think that's got it.

I think that's got it.
We can pull him out now.

[MAN GROANING]

Chet, you wanna grab his head?

CHET: All right.

I'll watch his legs.

Easy does it. Easy does it.

[MAN GROANING]

Easy does it. Easy does it.

Don't move your leg.
Don't move your leg.

All right, cut the water.

Drug box, Biophone
and traction splint.

How is he?
I don't know yet, ma'am.

You got some pretty bad
burns there on your hands.

I tried to lift the sink off.

I couldn't do it.

Oh, we'll get that
taken care of.

Chet, you got the time. Can
you take her over by the engine

and get those hands washed off?

Okay. You go with him, ma'am.

Wait a minute.
I'll get this stuff set up.

Is he conscious? Yeah.

Okay.

Rampart, this is Squad 51.

Go ahead, 51.

Rampart, we have a male victim here,
approximately 30 years old,

he has chemical burns
on about 20% of his body.

Possible broken femur and he's
inhaled some corrosive vapor.

Now, this is gonna
hurt just a bit.

JOE ON RADIO: 51,
have you started oxygen?


[SCREAMING]

That's affirmative,
Rampart. Victim's also been irrigated.

The vital signs are pulse is 120,
respiration is 28.

Stand by for BP.

JOE.' 1041,51.

All right,
take your blood pressure here.

They ought to be
all right, ma'am.

Just be sure
to keep them clean, okay?

Guy's on the front porch there.

Ought to be ready to transport.

You, okay?

Is there anything
left of my kitchen?

Well, dear,
the counter's a real mess,

but we'll clean up
that acid for you.

[SIRENS WAILING]

DISPATCHER ON RADIO:


toxic chemicals are stored
in a tanker.


Use caution.

KELLY ON RADIO: Squad 51,
this is Rampart. Can you send me some EKG?


JOHNNY ON RADIO:


We're sending you a strip.
Vitals to follow.


Pulse is 160. The victim
is in extreme pain, Rampart.


[INTERCOM BEEPING]

This patient is in V-fib.

Rampart, we have lost the
victim's pulse. Beginning CPR.


[RAPID BEEPING]

We're defibrillating victim,
Rampart.


Rampart, we've defibrillated
victim. Decent sinus rhythm.


JOE ON RADIO: Administer 2 amps
sodium bicarb and insert an airway.


KELLY ON RADIO: Start an IV,


DIXIE: Squad 51, continue monitoring
Vitals and transport immediately.


JOHNNY ON RADIO:
We're on our way, Rampart.


Treatment 1.

Dix, listen.

I'm looking for a guy by
the name of Gil Robinson.

And I think he's a
trainee. Do you know him?

Mmm-hmm.

Well, the problem is,
I think I know him from high school.

I'm not sure. I'm just trying to
find out if it's the same guy or not.

Well, I've got a coffee break coming
up in a minute. I'll take you to him.

Oh.

Start him on O2.

Pulse 120, respiration's 28,
BP 80 over 60.

We'll need blood for
CBC and SMA 12. Right.

Insert a urethral catheter.

We'll use a bicarbonate solution
to neutralize the acid burns.

Hey, looks like
you're gonna be all right.

Left femur and chest films,
okay?

Really, Gil?

GIL: Really. That's not all.

Suddenly, boom!

This big oil t*nk
takes off like a rocket.

Wow!

Well, it was like
the 4th of July, Larry.

People were running around,
there were flames going up...

Hi. Hey, Dix.

Gil! Gil Robinson, right?

Right.

You don't remember me?

I don't remember for sure, no.

Well, think back, high school.

John Gage.

Right! You were
on the track team.

That's right.



Listen, I want you to meet my partner,
Roy DeSoto.

Hi, nice to meet you. Hi, Roy.

Meet my buddy, Larry. Hi, Larry.

Hey, Larry, how you doing?

How are you feeling, Larry?

A lot better. Can I go home?

No, not for a while yet.

Hey, Larry, you can't go till
you've heard the rest of my story.

[PHONE RINGING]

Miss McCall.

Right.

Got to run. See you later.

Bye, Dix. See you later, Dix.

Well, you've been assigned
to us for field training.

No kidding. Yeah.

How about that, Larry? Me and John
are gonna be in the same team again.

Only this time,
I'm the freshman.

What's a freshman?

NURSE: You're just gonna
have to double them up in Room 6.

What's up? An accident
a half a block away.

Three people injured.
And we're swamped.

Yeah, I know.

Dr. Morton's in
Treatment Room 2.

Well, we'll just have
to put them all in 2.

Let's see,
call Dr. Brackett and Dr. Early,

and there are three
paramedics available.

That's a nice kid.
What seems to be his problem?

He's a renal failure patient.

Came in last week,
scared to death.

What are his chances?

Well, he needs a new kidney.

If he can get a transplant,
he's got a chance.

I can't palpate a radial pulse.

We have a severed radial artery. Hemostat,
quick.

Where's my passenger?

Lie down, ma'am, please.

He's my responsibility?
He was in my cab!

Not any longer.
Now, lady, please lie down.

I'm trying to help you. Now,
you're severely injured here.

Over there.

That's him!
What's wrong with him?

Please take a look
at him. Lie down!

Now, I'll get to him
as soon as I can!

Mike,
we have a head injury and he's comatose.

His pulse is 90,
respiration's 16,

blood pressure 120 over 80.

He has a scalp laceration.

All right, give me
another clamp.

Put a dressing on him,
and I'll see him in a sec.

Okay.

Another one?
Take him into another room.

There's nothing available, Mike.

Skull fracture, Doc.

Oh, okay. Just slide this.

Bring him right down here.

Dix, can you get vitals on him?

He was wearing this.

Might be important.

Let me have another clamp.

What have we got? Head injury on the left,
vitals are normal.

I got it, Kel.
Wanna help me, Roy?

ROY: Yeah.

Skull fracture, Kel.
Breathing is ataxic.

DIXIE: Pulse is 50.
BP is 220 over 100.

Johnny, start an IV
with normal saline.

Gil, give Mike a hand.

Start an IV
with lactated Ringer's.

IV with Ringer's, lactated.

DIXIE: He was wearing this medic-alert
bracelet when he was brought in.

Check it out, will you, Dix?

Alert the OR and have
the neurosurgeon stand by.

Right away.

This doesn't look too bad.
Probably just a concussion.

Wanna get the vitals, Roy?

Yeah, working on it right now.

What have you got, Mike?

Well, we got a couple
of fractured ribs

and a pneumothorax on the right.

JOE: What are the vitals?
NURSE: Blood pressure 100 over 60,

pulse 120 and respiration's 28.

Haven't you got
that IV started yet?

I can't get the vein.

Come out of there.
I'll do it, come on.

Go on!

MIKE: Open it up
to about 20 drops per minute.

Nothing hidden,
nothing hidden anywhere.

All right, you're in a hospital.

You're in a hospital. Hospital?

That right,
you're in a hospital.

You're gonna be all right, okay?

JOE: How does he look, Kel?

[SIGHING] Not good, Joe.

Pupils are irregular.
Respiration is ataxic.

Looks like severe
brainstem injury.

We better get him
hooked up to an EKG.

Gil, don't stand around.
Bring the EKG over here.

MAN: No use hiding.
They see everywhere.

Will you just lie back?
Everything's gonna be okay.

Let's take a quick look at it.

[BEEPING]

V-fib!

KELLY:
Four hundred watt-seconds.

JOHNNY: Wait a minute.

One, two, three.

Stand clear.

JOHNNY: Clear.

Carol, one amp sodium bicarb.

Everybody, get out!

Listen, you lie back and relax.

MAN: Everybody, get out!
Get out!

Somebody grab that man! Gil,
get over there and give him a hand.

[MAN GRUNTING]

Will you just relax?

You're in a hospital.
You had an accident.

You're gonna be okay.
You got to relax.

[MAN GRUNTING]

Zap him again, Joe.

ROY: Will you just relax?

One, two, three.

Stand clear. Clear.

No change.

Let's go intracardiac.

[WOMAN ON PA]

OR's ready, Kel.

Too late, Dix.

Did you run a check on
his medic-alert bracelet?

Yes, he's a
potential kidney donor.

In that case,
get a renal team down here stat.

Gil, you wanna put this EKG
machine over there, please?

Joe, continue CPR. We
got a renal team coming up.

Gil, get this man on O2.

How's she doing,
Mike? Just fine. She's ready for radiology.

All right, well,
send her right up.

I want you to contact
this man's next of kin

and see if we can confirm
permission for a transplant.

Mmm-hmm.

You know, Gil sure didn't
look very sharp today.

No.

I guess Dr. Morton probably
shook him up a little bit.

You know,
he wasn't like that at all in high school.

Not at all.

[sum-nus]

Nobody had to shove
him around then.

Of course, the stakes weren't so high then,
were they?

Yes, I suppose you're right.

[RADIO BEEPING]

DISPATCHER ON RADIO: Squad 51,
child injured at the amusement park.


Number 50 Beach Avenue. Cross street,
Pacific. 5-0 Beach.


Time out, 1145.

[SIREN BLARING]

Squad 51, 10-4.

Oh, yeah. It's nothing serious.

A couple of go-carts
collided, you see?

And some kids started
yelling for help.

So I thought I'd call you guys,
you know what I mean?

This job's gonna be
the death of me.

Mechanics and kids...

I'll go back to the farm.

Don't you know the guy on
the left gets the right of way, kid?

You don't really know
what you're talking about!

You don't even know how to drive,
no wonder!

Hey! Hey! Yes, I do!

No, you don't,
and you know it. Hey, cut it out!

Well, what happened?

I hit my nose on the
steering wheel. Yeah?

That kid bumped into my car.

It was you who bumped
into me. So quit griping.

It's bleeding a little bit,
but it doesn't seem to be broken.

No. Are you hurt
anywhere down here?

Johnny, wanna give me a
swab when you get the chance?

Yeah. My name is
Roy. What's yours?

Chuck. Nice to meet you, Chuck.

Chuck, my name is Johnny. I'm gonna
check you out, so you just relax, okay?

Too bad, kid. Next time,
don't mess with Old Elmer.

Oh,
yeah? Once they take care of my nose,

I'm gonna take
care of your nose.

Listen, if you can't fight any better
than you drive, you're in big trouble.

Hey, cut it out, both of you.

How about it, guys?
Is he gonna be okay?

I think he's gonna be fine.

Hey! Slow down, will you?

How do you feel, Chuck?

I'm okay. It was his fault.

I've never had an
accident in my life.

Anybody got the time?
It's very important.

Yeah, it's 11:50. Why?

Hey, what're you doing?

I'm gathering information
for my lawsuit. I got whiplash.

I'm only eight.

Oh, I can hardly move my neck.

Yeah, whiplash, huh?

[GROANING]

What do you think? Maybe
we should draw a blood sample?

Yeah. All right.

Let me take your arm here.

Well, he's got a good vein here.

Oh, good, well,
we'll just test this out here.

What happened to your whiplash?

Look at this mess, huh?
Look at this!

All right, that's it for
the squad and the equipment.

You got any questions at all?

I'd like to take a look
at the drug box again.

All right, sure. I wanna be
sure I know where everything is.

Got it right in here.

All righty.

Hey, welcome to the big leagues.

How you doing so far?

Give me a chance,
will you? I've only been here an hour.

Oh, it's plenty long enough to
learn a few basic fundamentals.

Yeah, like never go on a
blind date with Chet Kelly.

Well, don't worry.
He's not my type.

[ALARM SOUNDING]

DISPATCHER:
Squad 51, a man down.


6993 Market Street.
Cross street, 114th.


Ambulance is responding.
Time out, 0940.


Squad 51, KMG 365.

[SIREN BLARING]

JOHNNY: Gil, get the Biophone
and the data scope, will you?

Hallway on the second floor.

Name is Hank.

Him and his partner have
been drunk for two days.

They work one of those
super tankers.

JOHNNY: Okay, look,
I want you to stay out here

and tell the ambulance
exactly where we are, okay?

Right, right.

Roy?

Yeah.

Yup, been drinking.

Yeah.

Look's pretty shocky. Pulse is pretty fast,
too, 120.



Get that? 120.

Pulse is 120.

Gil,
open up the line to Rampart. Right.

Rampart, emergency.
This is Squad 51.

Can you hold on a second? I'll get it,
Carol.

Go ahead, 51.

We have a male about 50,
collapsed from alcohol intoxication.

We don't know that.

Correction, Rampart,
victim appears to be

intoxicated.

BP is 80 over 60.

Blood pressure is 80
over 60. Respiration's 28.

Did you get the pupils? Yeah.

Pulse is 120. There's
something strange going...

Look at this.

Two puncture marks.

That looks like a
snake bite. Yeah.

Well, he's got to be
up here somewhere.

Gil, go down to the squad and get the CO2,
okay?

Rampart, Squad 51.

On that supposed
alcoholic OD victim,

we've found two distinct
puncture marks in the calf,

surrounded by edema
and ecchymosis.

It looks like a snake bite.


and apply a restrictive band.

Start oxygen and IV with D5W.

Transport as soon as possible.

Oh, and try to find out what
kind of snake bit him. That's vital.



Do you want me to get that?

Yeah, I'm just gonna see
if I can find that snake.

All right. I'll leave this here.

Sir!

Sir!

Easy. Come on.

Come on,
you got to wash your eye out.

Come on.

Take it easy. Take it easy.

Hold still. I can't see!

I'm gonna wash your eye.

Take your hands away.

Roy, take your hands away.
Open your eyes.

[ROY GROANS]

Okay.

All right, open your eyes.

What the hell happened?

Snake hit him in
the eyes with venom.

JOHNNY: All right. Here, here.
I can get it, I can get it.

All right,
open your eyes. Open your eyes.

Okay.

JOHNNY: What kind of
a snake would do that?

All right, you got it.
All right, all right.

ROY: Cobra.

A what? A cobra.

Does it feel okay?
You gonna be okay?

It's all right. All right.

That's it. Move your hands down.

I got him.

JOHNNY: Come on.

JOHNNY: Take your hands down.
Open your eyes.

All right, just keep
your eyes open.

Did you find anything?

Nothing.

This man has no pulse.

What?

This man has no pulse.

I know he had a pulse.

Go get the defibrillator.
Never mind that.

Turn it on.

All right, in V-fib.

Clear. Clear.

All right, charge it again.


Clear.

All right, go out
and get the Biophone.

He's gone.

Probably an Ml.

No snake bite?

No, no snake bite.

Dr. Brackett, I wasted a lot
of time looking for a snakebite.

If I'd started CPR,
he might've had a chance.

Gil, under those circumstances,

I'd have probably made the
same assumption you did.

At any rate, those few seconds you
lost couldn't have made the difference.

It's hard to say.

It's hard to say
I might have k*lled a man.

Gil, look, he just said
you didn't k*ll him.

I'm going out to the squad.

[sums]

Go check on Roy.

All right. See you, Johnny.

Well, there's no
damage to the tissue.

It's a good thing you got to
that water as quickly as you did.

Oh, Gil didn't waste any time.

That was good thinking
on his part. Yeah.

Look, I'll see you guys, okay?

All right. Thanks a lot,
Doc. Okay. Catch you later, Doc.

How are the others doing?

Well, the guy
with the snakebite,

looks like he's gonna be okay.

The other guy didn't make it.

Heart att*ck?

Yeah.

Gil is blaming himself.

Where is he now?

Well, he's waiting
for us in the squad.

Hey, ready for your
second big shift, huh, Gil?

Yeah.

Looks like they're
keeping you pretty busy.

Yeah.

Hey, listen, what did you hear about
the kid with the kidney transplant?

He's going home today.

Great.

Well, I guess I better go
before you talk my ear off.

What's the matter
with Gil, today?

He's still upset about
losing that man last shift.

He doesn't have much confidence in himself,
does he?

Maybe he just doesn't have
what it takes to be a paramedic.

No.

Listen, I saw that guy in high
school excel in everything he did.

Did you try talking to him?

Yeah, I tried this morning.
He just got defensive.

I know he can do it.

I don't think he does, though.

Well, sometimes it's harder
to talk to people that you know.

Be right back.

Well, don't just stand there,
help me.

Gil?

Yeah.

All right if I talk
to you for a minute?

Sure.

Look, I know what
you're thinking.

I mean, I don't know
whether or not

you're gonna make
a real good paramedic,

but Johnny seems to think
an awful lot of you.

Maybe he made a mistake.

That's possible.
We all make mistakes.

The important thing is
we learn something from them.

Just keep plugging along.

I'll tell you something, Roy.

I really wanted
to be a paramedic.

Ever since I heard about the program,
it was all I could think about.

But now.

I just don't know
if I can hack it.

It's too much responsibility.

When I lost my first my victim,
I was gonna quit.

What happened?

Brackett talked me out of it.

You know what he said? He said,

"Somebody really needs help,"

"you look around and you say, 'Are
you the best available man for the job?'"

"And if you are,
then you do your best."

What if your best
isn't good enough?

You haven't really given
yourself a chance now, have you?

Look,

if you haven't got it,
we'll let you know.

[ALARM SOUNDING]

DISPATCHER:
Station 51, truck 36,


people trapped
at the amusement park.


Number 50 Beach Avenue.
Cross street, Pacific.


5-0 Beach. Time out, 0915.

STANLEY: Station 51, KMG 365.

[SIRENS WAILING]

[HORN BLARING]

STANLEY: What's the problem?

MAN: The sky ride's stuck.

Now, the cables came
off of the pulleys.

She's stuck at 140 feet.

STANLEY: How many
people are in there?

Three.

Now, the operator didn't
know the cable was off.

It might've gotten frayed or
stripped before he stopped it.

The only thing I can
think of to do

is to go up the tower,
lower one man to the basket.

Tell you what, get your life lines
and belts and check out the cable.

You might have to lower the people
down one at a time on the Stokes.

STANLEY: Don't think we're
gonna get a ladder truck in here.

You guys get the rest of the gear,
bring it up to the base.

LA, this is 51.

Cancel truck 36.

This thing ever get
stuck like this before?

Never.

If you can hear me up there,

some firemen are coming
up to help you down!

Don't move any more
than necessary, please!

Let me get your rope.

Just put it right there for now. Can
you all get out of the way, please?

That's fine right there.

JOHNNY: Hello, are you okay?

Help, please help us.

My brother is sick.

JOHNNY: What's wrong with him?

I think it's his heart.

Hurry, please.

He can't get his breath.

Why don't we hook that pulley onto one of
those diagonals up there. It'll be quicker.

That way we can swing across.

Swing across? Okay. Yeah.

What do you want me to do?

Why don't you just
stay here with Johnny?

I'm gonna go up there
and secure that line.

Right.

Hey, Cap.

Looks like one of the people
in here has had a heart att*ck.

We're gonna try to swing across.

Can you help us with the lines?

Okay. We'll open
a line to Rampart.

Chet, get the Biophone.

CHET: Rampart,
this is Engine 51.

We have a possible
heart att*ck victim.

Please stand by.

Cap, here come the lines.

Tie one of these up. All right.

Okay, Captain.

Coming back. Okay.

Please help him.

All right, steady me.

Okay, Cap, swing me
towards the basket.

Get back to the patient.

Go back to the patient.

I got no pulse.

Start CPR.

[GROANS]

Slack off!

MAN: Slack off.

Slack off.

Cap, I'm going up top
to check the cable.

STANLEY: Okay!

All right, all right,
we got a pulse.

He's breathing on his own.

Hey, Roy.

Can you lower us
down in this basket?

No, it's still jammed.

Cap.

We're gonna need a Stokes.

You got them.

How's he doing?
It's getting better.

Sun got it? It's weak.

Okay.

All right,
pull it to me. Pull it to me.

On the guide line. There we go,
there we go.

All right, now lower it down.

Lower it down a bit.

Lower it down a little bit.

Okay. Little bit more, okay.

Come up a little bit...
All right.

All right.

Ready to transport.

Okay. We're just gonna
have to ease him out.

Got to keep it real level. Okay.

All right,
bring him up just a little bit.

All right.

All right. Now, just easy.

Okay, let him swing.

You let him out, just easy.

GIL: Yeah, I got it.
All right, he's even. Okay.

Got it. Lower away!

A little more.

Cap, we've got no pulse.

We need a paramedic down here!

The man's gone into arrest!

Secure the line.
We'll repel down.

Swing the line to me.

I'll get the defibrillator.

There you go.

Okay.

All right, now, ladies,
I want you to stay inside,

and we'll have you down
in just a second, okay?

All right.

Okay, Chet,
I'll take over. Get the Biophone.

Clear.

V-fib.

Rampart, this is Squad 51.

We have a male,
approximately 60 years old.


He's in V-fib, We've defibrillated once,
unsuccessfully.


Request permission to start bicarb,
IV and esophageal airway.



Defibrillate again,
start an IV with D5W,

administer one amp
sodium bicarb.




JOHNNY: Clear.

All right, 51,
he's in sinus rhythm.

Administer a lidocaine drip and
transport as soon as possible.



Well, I think
he's gonna be okay.

Well, guys, I think
he's gonna be all right.

You know,
we were pretty good together as a team.

You better watch out.

Boy,
when that guy started breathing again,

I think that was about the most
exciting thing that ever happened to me.

Yeah, I know what you mean.

But, you know,
the next time something like this happens,

it's gonna feel just as good.

Well, I'm not used to
making speeches...

Good, then don't, because there's somebody
here who wants to say goodbye to you.

Hey, Larry.

How you doing old buddy?

Hey, Gil, guess what?

What?

I got a new chance to live,
just like you said.

Isn't that something, Gil?

That's really something, Larry.

[RADIO BEEPING]

DISPATCHER ON RADIO:
Squad 51, are you available?


Squad 51, available.

DISPATCHER: Squad 51,
man down at 2814 Jeffrey Avenue.


2814 Jeffrey Avenue.

Cross street, Maple.
Time out, 0105.




Hey, I got to go now.

Take care of yourself, okay?
Bye-bye.

Bye-bye, Dixie.

I wish I was good enough
to be a paramedic someday.

Well, what makes
you think you aren't?

There's nobody like Gil, nobody.

Well, there's nobody
like you, either.

And maybe when you're
a few years older,

you could talk to Gil about it.

That's a good idea, Miss McCall.

Hey, look who's here.
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