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The Good Doctor – S07E01 – Baby, Baby, Baby | Transcript

Shaun and Lea adjust to parenthood as they debate the importance of schedule and routine for Steve. Meanwhile, Shaun takes on his first case back at the hospital with two baby patients in need of the same heart.
The Good Doctor - S07E01 - Baby, Baby, Baby

Original air date: February 20, 2024

Shaun and Lea adjust to parenthood as they debate the importance of schedule and routine for Steve. Meanwhile, Shaun takes on his first case back at the hospital with two baby patients in need of the same heart.

* * *

[dramatic music playing]

[Shaun] Gloves.

[Steve cooing]

Start the timer, please.

[Bachman-Turner Overdrive’s “Takin’ Care Of Business” plays]

Good luck, babe. It’s a doozy.

♪ They get up every morning

♪ From the alarm clock’s Warning ♪

♪ Take the 8:15 into the city ♪

♪ There’s a whistle up above ♪

♪ And people pushing People shoving ♪

♪ And the girls Who try to look pretty ♪

♪ And I’ve been takin’ care Of business, every day ♪

♪ Takin’ care of business Every way ♪

♪ I’ve been takin’ care Of business, it’s all mine ♪

♪ Takin’ care of business And working overtime ♪

Thirty-seven seconds. Good work.

[coos]

I think that was your fastest yet.

Second-fastest.

Fifteen minutes of independent play is starting now.

I will log it into my app.

You sure you don’t want to get in a few extra snuggles before you leave?

Oh, I had ten minutes of snuggles this morning.

Very nice.

I’ve also set up the app on your phone.

It will alert you when it’s time for Steve’s nap, feeding, playtime…

Just in case I miss the schedules posted on the fridge, the bathroom, and in our bedroom.

Yes. And I will be able to track it while I’m at work.

[chuckles] Steve and I will be fine.

Just enjoy your first day back.

[Steve coos]

We can finish reading the latest.

Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery

when I get home.

After this, Steve should have at least five minutes of tummy time.

Yesterday, he only logged 12 minutes, which is three less than…

I love you.

Say hi to everyone for me.

Okay. I love you, too.

[melancholic music playing]

I will miss you both.

[coos]

[chuckles]

[elevator bell dings]

[somber music playing]

[opening theme music playing]

I don’t know why you need three protein powders for your smoothies.

They do different things.

She’s barely taken an ounce.

That’s what the protein-powder companies want you to believe.

Are you holding her right?

Yes.

She needs to be upright with her head properly supported.

Good.

And you mixed it enough?

The same as always.

She’s not interested again.

And she seems lethargic.

I’ll take her to get checked out.

Well, I’d like to come, too.

Sure. You can carry this.

[elevator bell dings]

Good morning. How’s Perez today?

Don’t know.

It’s almost 8:00 a.m.

It’s been “today” for a whole eight hours.

You two haven’t texted each other yet?

We both decided we need space.

He’s focused on his recovery.

I’ve got my life here.

I fully support that.

And your next chapter begins tonight.

You and me. Drinks, music, questionable decisions.

You and Jerome finally got the surgery!

You’re no longer joined at the hip?

Jerome is obsessed with some docuseries about one of the many sports that I don’t care about.

Come on. It’s been too long.

I’ve been busy.

You’ve been mopey.

Fine. I agree to drinks and music, but I’m definitely a “maybe” on questionable decisions.

All right. We’ll work up to it.

Okay.

We’re going out tonight for drinks, starting a new chapter.

[Asher] That’s right.

We’re calling it “Bad decisions with good friends.”

We’re definitely not calling it that. Wanna join?

No, thank you.

Papa Murphy, welcome back.

Pictures of Steve.

I was just about to ask.

This way, I avoid the disruption of pulling out my phone.

[Asher chuckles]

Look at that smile!

Just like his mom!

He was pooping in that one. Here he is… about to poop.

Hmm. A theme develops.

[laughter]

[Jared] Aw. He’s got your eyes, Shaun.

I need to find Dr. Lim.

You may keep those. I made enough for everyone.

Marcus sends greetings from Spain.

Oh, I thought he was at a meditation retreat in Vietnam.

He was, and now he’s walking the Camino de Santiago.

How nice for him.

I’m two surgeons down with no one to approve hiring a new one.

I need the board to appoint an interim president, stat.

Just as long as it’s not O’Brien.

They wouldn’t.

I heard from a staffer who covers board meetings that his name’s on the shortlist.

Ugh. Of the worst possible candidates for the position.

Good morning! Pictures of Steve.

Aww.

You no longer have your cane.

Yeah. PT said I was ready.

I’m glad to have you back.

I would like to join your case.

He’s adorable, Dr. Murphy. Welcome back.

Shaun, I’m thrilled to see you, but I’m not sure this is the case where you want to start as a new dad.

It is an exciting and challenging surgery.

[quirky music playing]

[cooing]

Thank you for coming in on such short notice.

Hello. I am Dr. Shaun Murphy, attending surgeon and father of a baby boy.

He is two weeks old, and today is my first day back, but that will not affect my performance as your son’s doctor.

Is it true there might be a heart for Jack?

Yes, but the heart isn’t available yet, and we may not get it once it is.

We’ve been through this before.

Why isn’t the heart available yet?

Well, the donor family is still saying their goodbyes before they turn off life support.

[somber music playing]

Jack is an excellent match for the donor heart, and his latest echo indicates that his cardiomyopathy and overall cardiac function has worsened, so he should be at the top of the list.

I just want to run some additional tests to make sure he’s otherwise healthy.

There is a problem.

There is a small scratch, likely from his fingernails, which has developed cellulitis and an abscess.

If the infection spreads and he spikes a fever,

Jack will be ineligible for the transplant.

We have to lance and debride it right away.

Morning.

Hi.

This is Steve, our son, who is now two weeks old.

Steve, this is the grumpy man who lives down the hall and gave you your favorite blanket.

[coos]

Shaun was very impressed you guessed his first name.

Wanna take a stab at the middle?

Aaron.

I was lobbying pretty hard for Bowie, because why not name your kid after the coolest person who ever lived?

But Shaun insisted.

[cooing]

You should come over sometime.

You two both grunt a lot and make strange faces.

I’ve got a lot going on, so…

We live next door. You have nothing going on.

You’re mad. And I get it.

But are you really gonna ignore Shaun and Steve and me forever?

Is that the plan?

[elevator bell dings]

I’m not ignoring you.

And he’s beautiful.

Congratulations.

[somber music playing]

[softly] I tried.

Any cyanosis while eating?

Maybe a hint of bluishness on her lips last night.

I haven’t noticed anything.

But given her prior surgery and the Turner syndrome, I thought we should…

The blood flow is reduced.

It looks like Eden’s aortic stenosis has progressed more rapidly than we were expecting.

Can we put her on beta blockers?

We can try, but given how dysplastic the valve is, I don’t think it will do much good.

You’ll want to get more imaging, but I think Eden’s gonna need another surgery very soon.

[somber music playing]

Cardiac MRI confirmed severe narrowing of the valve, obstruction, and left ventricular dysfunction.

Eden needs a new aortic valve, or her heart failure will get worse.

Are you thinking mechanical or cryopreserved homograft for the replacement?

Mechanical valve for a neonate needs to be built, and it will require future surgeries plus lifetime blood thinners.

Cryopreserved valves risk degeneration down the line, but it is a solid idea, especially as part of the Ross Procedure.

Possible complications?

Aortic insufficiency, pulmonary stenosis.

We can take some time, discuss the different options…

Do the Ross Procedure.

[dramatic music playing]

I’ll have Asher get her prepped.

[cooing]

It’s time to get off the sidelines.

I’m not sure what you’re referring to.

Are you gonna throw me a ball?

You’ve run the hospital before.

You can handle a few more months.

[chuckling] I can, but why would I want to?

That’s a no?

Yes.

Get ready for Interim President O’Brien.

They would never.

That’s like Mao meets Basil Fawlty.

Wow. That’s two obscure and dated references.

They’re never gonna move on O’Brien.

Well, apparently, he’s on the board’s shortlist.

Throw your hat in the ring, he won’t stand a chance.

[sighs] My hat’s gonna stay on my head, but I’ll handle it.

[Jordan] Okay, Jack.

You know that little bump behind your ear?

We have to poke it with something sharp, which will hurt, but we have to do it so hopefully you can get a new heart.

But Mr. Snugglepuff is here to keep you company.

Asher said the taco truck added chorizo to the menu, and it’s bus sin’.

The next late night, we should share an order.

Not really my thing. Thanks.

The sheet papoose is secure.

Good. Dr. Kalu, cradle the baby.

Dr. Allen, sterilize the area behind the ear.

Okay, baby, don’t look.

His eyes are not yet able to focus beyond eight to twelve inches.

[Jared] The abscess is pretty deep.

It may take a while to heal.

What about a wound vac?

We don’t have one small enough.

It’s okay.

Maggots.

How are those better than just using antibiotics?

Maggots work faster to clear necrotic debris on account of the antimicrobial nature of their saliva and other digestive secretions.

It’s safe to put those bugs on my baby?

Larvae.

[Jared] These are medical maggots.

They’ve been specially disinfected. It’s completely safe.

I would use maggots on my son, Steve, in this situation.

That is unlikely to happen, but I hope the parallel puts you at ease.

[quirky music playing]

Go ahead.

Hmm!

You want some coffee?

Or I have a stash of protein bars in my office.

I’m fine, thanks.

But if you want something, go ahead.

What’s your family here for?

A heart transplant, hopefully, for our son, Jack.

How old is he?

Twelve weeks.

Oh. My daughter, Eden, is 11 weeks.

She’s having heart surgery right now.

Y’all will be in my prayers.

Is this Jack’s first surgery?

He’s had other procedures, but this would be his first open-heart surgery.

If it happens.

When it happens, I recommend Biafine cream for post-op.

It contains a natural compound called trolamine.

It really helped with Eden’s recovery.

How many surgeries has your daughter had?

Uh, one. At seven weeks.

Hmm.

Eden and I are old hands.

You’re two very resilient ladies.

I’m Kate Pierce. This is my husband, Owen.

Morgan Reznick.

Alex Park.

Would you like to…

[imperceptible]

Yeah! You can do it! Come on.

Oh! There you go!

You got it! You got it!

[cell phone buzzing]

You got it!

Hi, Daddy. How is it being back at work?

I just applied maggots to a baby a few months older than Steve.

[Steve coos]

Is that Steve?

He is supposed to be asleep.

Mm. He’s doing well with tummy time.

And you mentioned yesterday he was behind, so I thought I’d add a few extra minutes.

No, no.

Tummy time should not be extended into his sleep window.

Did you not get the app alert?

You are seven minutes into nap time.

Nope. I guess I missed it.

Delaying his nap could make him overtired or delay his next feeding.

The schedule is very important.

I know, Shaun, I know. It’s just a few extra minutes.

Eight minutes.

That is not a few. It is several.

Uh, I should go put Steve down.

Bye-bye.

Okay.

[cell phone buzzes]

Oh.

We had to abort the procedure.

Eden has a bicuspid pulmonary valve.

There wasn’t enough tissue to attach it to the aorta.

And we observed leaking at the valve.

Her heart is failing even faster than we thought.

I’m so sorry.

What’s our next move?

Oh. The maggots worked!

Baby Jack’s infection has cleared, and the heart is on its way here.

Eden has two bad valves and rapidly progressing heart failure.

We have one donor heart and two babies who need it.

[dramatic music playing]

It’s up to us to decide which baby gets this heart.

Jack has been waiting for three months.

A transplant is his only option.

He could go on a VAD until another heart is available.

That could take months. And a VAD isn’t a good option for Jack because of the…

Morgan. Morgan.

You can’t be here. Neither of you.

I can’t be anywhere else, so either someone should sedate me or…

Well, that can be arranged.

It’s only a problem that Park and I are here if we influence your decision, so don’t let us.

I won’t say a word.

Dr. Kalu?

Yeah, um as far as the VAD for Jack, he’s underweight, so a high risk of complications, infections, bleeding, stroke.

It’s not a great option for Eden, either.

Eden can go on ECMO while we’re waiting for mechanical replacement valves.

ECMO has risks, especially for a baby with Turner syndrome.

And the longer she’s on it, the greater the risk of serious complications.

The valves may not get here in time.

Care to weigh in, Dr. Murphy?

Jack and Eden are equally good matches to the donor heart based on size and blood type.

Anything else?

It’s okay, Shaun.

[tense music playing]

Without this heart…

Jack will die.

Eden may also die without it.

But she has other options.

They are risky, but they are options.

Jack should get the heart.

We’ll put Eden on ECMO tonight.

And I’ll contact Abbott about getting the 15-millimeter valves ASAP.

Hey. I’m sorry. Can we rain-check tonight?

I’m exhausted, and Jerome promised that we could watch a nice crime procedural.

Sometimes you need a case of the week.

Yeah.

Mm-hmm.

Mmm! My favorite!

One cheddar brisket with mild sauce so little Steve’s next meal doesn’t burn his mouth.

You are a treasure. I am starving.

Thank you.

Mm-hmm.

Poor Eden, having to go on ECMO.

And poor Morgan and Park.

It’s… been a day.

And how are you holding up? Without Perez?

Everything that happens, at home or at work, he’s the first person I want to tell.

Mm-hmm.

And I can’t.

Or I shouldn’t.

I really miss him.

You can tell me everything.

If it’s too surgical, I may not understand it, but I am excellent at nodding and acting interested.

Mm!

I’m here for you. So is Asher.

What’s going on?

Tell me. Babies are terrible at gossip.

[chuckles]

Asher and I were supposed to hang out tonight, just the two of us.

[Steve fussing]

Do you need to check on him?

No. If he smells me, I’ll never get out of there.

He’ll settle back down.

So you and Asher had plans…

He blew me off for Jerome because he had a hard day on Eden’s case, which I get but I had a hard day, too.

Mm-hmm.

[Steve crying]

Steve’s not settling.

Well, he can wait a minute. You had a hard day, too?

It… It just seems like everybody has someone except…

[crying continues]

Go.

I am so sorry.

I-I will be right back. I swear.

[Jordan] Mm.

[somber music playing]

[door opens]

You didn’t have to do this, Shaun.

I am more thorough than anyone else in this hospital.

Starting ECMO.

[beep]

[Dr. Lim] I just got an e-mail from Gail on the board.

I’m suddenly a top candidate for interim president?

You’re welcome.

I don’t want that job.

[chuckling] It’s better… better you than O’Brien.

You’re a good manager, you’re you’re well-respected, and, you know, as a diverse woman…

People aren’t diverse.

I’m part of an underrepresented group.

Right. That.

Makes you an ideal candidate.

Look. Gail loved the idea.

I hate you.

You’re welcome.

[crying]

Shh, shh, shh. Shh, shh, shh.

[Shaun] I am glad to see you, Steve, but you are not supposed to be awake.

Yeah, I-I fell asleep during his afternoon nap.

We didn’t wake up until 4:30.

You need to set an alarm.

The schedule is very important.

I know. I know.

[crying continues]

Tomorrow I am doing a heart transplant on a 12-week-old baby.

Okay. You need sleep.

Yes, I do.

Go to bed. I’ll handle Steve tonight.

I-I don’t think I can.

Shh, it’s okay. What about your noise-canceling headphones?

I fall asleep on my side. I cannot do that in those.

Maybe you could go spend the night at Glassman’s?

No.

What about your office? Can you sleep there?

[crying continues]

[ethereal music playing]

We can save them both with one heart.

It’s called a domino transplant.

Jack’s heart is failing, but his valves are healthy, so when Jack receives the donor heart, we will use his valves to replace Eden’s damaged ones.

A fresh homograft donor means Eden won’t need multiple surgeries or blood thinners.

One heart could save both babies.

What are the chances of valve failure?

Minimal. Jack’s valves are very functional despite his cardiomyopathy.

The odds of success are high.

It’s the best option we have, for Eden.

And for Jack?

We would have to be very careful while removing his heart so as not to damage his valves.

That would mean more time on bypass, which means a greater risk of bleeding or infection.

It’s a lot to ask.

They can always say no.

What would you say?

[indistinct conversation]

You haven’t eaten anything in 24 hours.

I’m fine.

No matter what they decide, we’ll get through this.

Don’t.

What, try to help?

Yes, exactly. It’s pointless and annoying.

You know, I get that you don’t think of Eden as mine yet, and that’s why you haven’t included me in any of her medical decisions.

Not that I need that, or disagree with any of your choices…

Is pissing me off another attempt to distract me?

I’m not trying to pick a fight.

I just want you to know that I love that girl like she’s my own, and…

I’m as scared as you are.

And I wish you’d let me help you because we’re in this together.

That’s it.

And I really don’t want you to pass out, so please eat or drink something.

If our baby can save your baby’s life, we’d be honored.

[sighs]

[sentimental music playing]

“I’ll love you forever, I’ll like you for always. As long as I’m living, my baby you’ll be.”

Oh, my God. What a tear-jerker.

We need to find one of Daddy’s medical journals.

[chime]

[computerized voice] Reminder.

Nap time in five minutes.

[cell phone buzzes]

How do I un-sync the baby app from our speaker?

Oh, no. You should not do that.

I set it up so you can remember the schedule.

When it’s just me and Steve home during the day, I like to be a little bit more… flexible, go with the flow.

I’ll just… I’ll just unplug it.

It has a battery in case of power outages.

Lea, when I’m at work, I like knowing what you and Steve are doing.

It makes me feel like I am still a part of his day.

And when Steve gets off his sleep schedule, I have to go sleep at the hospital, and I miss you both even more.

Aw, we missed you, too. How did you sleep?

Not well. But I came up with a very good idea to save both babies.

I have to go prep for my surgery now. I love you.

Dr. Lim, we have a meeting to review…

One minute, Shaun.

Gail, of course, diversity and representation should be considered, but given this is an interim position,

I think the top priority is finding someone who can hit the ground running from day one.

And that means someone who’s done it before.

He’s too modest to sing his own praises, but I think he’s the obvious choice.

Hmm. Compelling argument. Thank you.

Oh.

And seniors are also an underrepresented group.

[Dr. Lim] Dr. Murphy and I will start with Jack in OR 1.

Asher, you’ll be with Eden next door getting her ready.

Allen and Kalu, you two will receive the donor heart and prep it for transplant.

Then Dr. Lim and I will put Jack on bypass and start cooling him to 25 degrees.

Given his age and underlying medical condition, he should not be on bypass for longer than two hours.

Putting in Jack’s new heart will take about 90 minutes.

That leaves us half an hour to remove the old one.

While Shaun is transplanting the new heart,

I will be excising Jack’s valves.

We have zero room for error.

Prep your patients.

[Jordan] Exciting case.

Yep.

We’re saving two babies at once, and your commentary is “yep”?

I was agreeing with you.

With as few words as possible, which you’ve been doing for the last two weeks.

If you have a problem with me, just tell me.

Okay.

Okay. I have a problem with you and how you handled Perez’s case.

That’s completely stupid.

You just said I should tell you.

I didn’t say I would agree with you.

You overrode our patient’s wishes, and Perez is gone because of it.

Perez is alive because of it.

You don’t know what would have happened if you’d listened to him.

You made the decision you thought was best.

Didn’t matter what anyone else wanted.

I’m sorry, but you don’t get to do that and not deal with the consequences.

The consequences?

I lost someone I care about a lot, and I miss him every day.

I’m really trying hard to focus on the good things in my life, the job I love, the friends I thought I had…

But it feels like everyone is moving on, and I’m just alone.

Spare yourself the burden of punishing me.

[helicopter blades whirring]

[Dr. Lim] Get her prepped, draped, and under anesthesia.

I’ll see you in 30 minutes, hopefully.

[dramatic music playing]

I had an extra set.

You don’t have to be Catholic.

They can just be a reminder that you’re not alone.

Thank you.

[pensive music playing]

[Shaun] There is a lot of scar tissue to dissect through.

The cardiomyopathy has caused Jack’s heart to enlarge and adhere to his chest wall.

This will take longer than planned in order to preserve the valves.

[Jared] We inspected the mitral valve.

The atrial septum is intact. The heart looks good.

[Dr. Lim] Dr. Allen, connect the pulmonary veins to prep the left atrial cuff.

Dr. Kalu, you’re with us.

[Shaun] Okay. Increase flows and cool to 25 degrees.

Start the clock.

Come on, Peanut.

[Steve fussing]

We went with the flow, but now it’s nap time.

Come on. Settle.

Oh.

[crying]

Ohh! We were so close, Peanut.

[Shaun] I need to transect the aorta, but there are thick adhesions where it meets the valve.

[Dr. Lim] You now only have an hour and 14 minutes to put the new heart in.

[Shaun] The annulus is at the tip of my dissection.

If I nick that, the aortic valve is useless.

Anterior retraction.

[Dr. Lim] We’re running out of time.

Jack’s transplant is at serious risk.

Metz.

Dr. Murphy, you need to abort this procedure.

Shaun, ECMO is still an option for Eden.

You need to abort…

Got it!

[ethereal music playing]

The valves are good.

Ready for the donor heart.

[gently upbeat music playing]

[Dr. Lim] How is she?

[Asher] Ready to go.

[Nurse Hawks] Vitals are great.

[Dr. Lim] Open her chest and start her on bypass while I recover the valves.

[Asher] Scalpel. How do the valves look?

[Dr. Lim] A little bigger than we measured on imaging.

Makes the anastomosis challenging.

[Asher] But it can still work?

[Dr. Lim] It has to.

Hmm.

[chime]

Feeding time starting in five minutes.

[crying]

Shh.

[Lea whimpers]

[Dr. Lim] It’s not seating perfectly.

Let’s try a purse string suture.

[Asher] 7-0 Prolene.

Got it. Saline.

There’s a paravalvular leak at the aortic.

[Asher] How about pledgeted sutures?

[Dr. Lim] In an infant this small, that could cause stenosis.

We try again.

7-0 Prolene.

[Jordan] It’s been almost two and a half hours.

We need to get him off bypass.

[Shaun] The aortic anastomosis is complete.

Unclamp the aorta and start rewarming.

[Jared] Now what?

[Shaun] We wait… and hope his heart starts beating.

[tense music playing]

It’s been almost three hours. Do you think something’s wrong?

[Asher] The sutures are holding.

[Dr. Lim] Now the little thing just has to beat.

Start warming her up. Decrease the flows.

[flat line]

[Shaun] We need to shock him.

Clear!

[paddles whine]

[thump]

[flat line]

Again.

[somber music playing]

The surgeries were successful.

Both your babies are doing very well, and you can see them soon.

Thank you.

[serene music playing]

Thank you.

You saved our daughter.

You are welcome.

I miss my baby. I’m going home now.

[laughter]

All right. Let me just jump in the shower.

And then I’m good to go.

Go home to your man.

It’s okay.

Bless you.

Tomorrow?

Mm-hmm.

[Jared] You’re right.

This chorizo is…

What’d you call it?

Bussin’.

Right.

Definitely bus sin’.

I thought we could share an order.

[serene music playing]

Tell me you didn’t forget the hot sauce.

[fussing]

Hello.

Hmm…

Why is Steve awake?

[door closes]

You look terrible.

[chuckles] Thank you.

Steve has been fed, burped, changed, and woken from his haphazard nap by a speaker reminder.

How’s Eden?

Very good. And Jack’s transplant was successful.

[Lea] Mm.

Parenting can be very hard.

[Lea] Mm-hmm.

Yeah. I’ve noticed.

There are many hard choices about what works best.

People want different things.

I will try to make room for your way.

The schedule is important, but I will un-sync the app from the speaker.

I put it out on the fire escape.

Thank you.

I really appreciate it.

But the only room I need right now is the bedroom.

Okay.

Good night.

I’m borrowing your noise-canceling headphones.

I love you both.

[crying]

[quirky music playing]

Are you kidding me? You recommended me?

I was just following your example.

See? You’re a natural leader.

I’m old. I’m worn out and I’m old.

You’re wise.

I remember rotary phones.

You’re vital. You’re experienced.

You’re the most respected doctor in this hospital.

Aaron, you have institutional knowledge and a… and a natural, unexplainable gravitas.

Will you please stop being an idiot and just take the job?

Stop being selfish and stubborn.

How am I being selfish? I’m…

Oh, you’re together. That saves me a stop.

Your recommendations presented the board with a very difficult choice.

So we didn’t

choose.

You two are the new interim co-presidents

of St. Bonaventure Hospital.

Congratulations!

[whimsical music playing]

This is not the schedule, Steve.

Mommy needs to sleep. Daddy needs to sleep.

You need to sleep.

[crying]

Please?

Please. We are both very tired.

[crying continues]

Please. We are both very tired.

Hey.

[fussing]

I don’t know what to do.

I can’t go inside because Lea needs to sleep.

I’ve always been able to get him down before.

Sometimes babies just need to cry.

[crying]

Hey. Um

why don’t I take him?

Get some sleep.

It’s okay. Just get some rest.

I will just take a short nap.

Take as long as you need.

Hey.

Hey. I got you. Hey.

Hey. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.

[crying stops]

I got you.

Huh. I got you.

[cooing]

[serene music playing]

I’m Grandpa

in case you were wondering.

[chuckles]

[closing theme music playing]

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