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Watch House Nobody's Fault Season 8 Episode 11 online in HD on Dailymotion.
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00:17You
00:39I don't know.
01:14Let the record show that we are officially convening disciplinary hearing regarding
01:19the events of February 3, 2012 in patient room 209.
01:24Dr. House, this recording will be transcribed and published along with all supporting documentation
01:28in ruins.
01:30Do you have any questions before we get started?
01:34Yeah.
01:35Who the hell are you?
01:39I'm Walter Cofield, Chief of Neurology Mercy Hospital.
01:43I'll be deciding your fate today.
01:55Cofield.
01:57You were the residency director at Hopkins before you moved to Mercy, which means it's
02:01safe to assume that you trained Foreman.
02:03Which means it's also safe to assume that he trusts you.
02:05This hearing isn't about me, Dr. House.
02:07I know you'd like to make it about me because then it wouldn't be about you.
02:11It's interesting that he picked the old mentor to judge the new one.
02:15Interesting, but not relevant.
02:17The facts of this case...
02:19The facts are in the file.
02:22If you have trouble reading my handwriting, give me a call.
02:24I'm going back to work.
02:27If I just consider the file, the facts aren't in your favor.
02:32The facts say you should be suspended.
02:35Which, from what I understand, would mean a revocation of your parole.
02:57The patient was a 32-year-old high school chemistry teacher.
03:01He collapsed while out jogging.
03:03He was paralyzed in all four extremities, despite the fact that scans show no sign of stroke
03:08or structural lesions.
03:09He put out an APB for a car with a man-sheet dent in the grill?
03:13No broken bones, no signs of trauma.
03:16Transverse myelitis.
03:18Boring.
03:19No enhancement on the MRI.
03:21I just don't know what to do.
03:23Please, you have to help me solve this thing.
03:33A little poetic license.
03:36What are you doing?
03:39Taking my Vicomins.
03:41What's Vicodin?
03:42Did you have surgery recently?
03:44About a decade ago.
03:45My leg is no good at judging time.
03:48Were you taking Vicodin during this case?
03:52Uh...
03:52Yes.
03:57During about nine years, previous cases, my process has proven.
04:05Good things usually happen.
04:07Bad things sometimes happen.
04:10And when bad things happen, we should figure out what went wrong so we can learn from it and correct
04:16it.
04:16So we can assign blame instead of recognizing that bad things sometimes happen.
04:24It's nobody's fault.
04:30And then what happened?
04:34Those who can do, those who can't teach.
04:38Those who can't teach, teach Jim.
04:41Those who can't move their arms or legs, teach us to laugh at others.
04:45House actually presented the case in that way, or are you just trying to make him look bad?
04:50Why would I be trying to make him look bad?
04:53Could be your not-so-subtle way of implying this was House's fault.
04:58Given what's happened, it's understandable that your opinion would color your testimony, but I just want to know what you
05:02said, what you did, and what you were thinking at the time.
05:07I don't think it was his fault.
05:11Just tell me your initial theory.
05:15I thought the patient had a liver problem.
05:17Empatic encephalopley explained why he passed out, why he couldn't move his limbs.
05:21But that's not the idea House went with.
05:24He thought Taub's idea was stupid.
05:27And what about your idea?
05:28He thought that was stupid, too.
05:31No, I meant what was it?
05:33Oh, I thought the patient had normal pressure hydrocephalus.
05:37And why did House think that was stupid?
05:39Oh, come on.
05:41Unless you're an idiot, you know I thought Park was an idiot.
05:46The patient had low opening pressure on his LP.
05:49That's what I said.
05:51No, you idiot!
05:52The patient had low opening pressure on his LP.
05:56Try unsquinting your eyes and reading the labs next time.
05:59You intentionally trying to get me to dislike you?
06:01That was me.
06:02Chair squeaked.
06:03You're testifying for the record that you actually used the phrasing unsquint your eyes?
06:08It's not the place to exercise your guilt.
06:10I actually used the phrasing unsquint your eyes.
06:19He's hypokalamic, could indicate a problem with his heart.
06:22EKG was normal.
06:23But Chase, a doctor who actually takes the time to read the lab reports, has a point.
06:28That guy's potassium is off.
06:30Could be thyroid toxic paralysis.
06:32Start him on steroids, PTU, and beta blockers.
06:35Mm-hmm.
06:39And how did these orange smudges get on the patient files?
06:43Seriously?
06:45That's your follow-up?
06:47I eat a lot of Cheetos, I forget to wash my hands.
06:51Is my snacking really relevant to this case?
06:54Might be.
06:54If these were actually Cheetos stains.
06:57What are they?
07:06Seriously?
07:07Pals?
07:09You're blaming me?
07:10You used Adams' shampoo.
07:14I didn't do it.
07:17It was a harmless prank.
07:20My team is made up of type A personalities.
07:23They need somebody to break the tension every once in a while.
07:25So this was a team-building exercise?
07:28Is that what he called it?
07:30That's what he implied.
07:31House prefers chaos over cohesion.
07:34He believes that disagreement and mistrust lead to better ideas.
07:39He's not wrong.
07:41As opposed to being right?
07:45So you're treated with steroids, and then what happened?
07:48They worked.
07:49Our patient woke up.
07:50Bill?
07:52Can you hear me?
07:54Yeah.
07:55I'm thirsty.
07:57It's normal.
07:58You've been in a coma for several hours.
08:00Can you tell me your name?
08:02Uh, Bill.
08:03Bill Koffelman.
08:05Can you tell me what happened to me?
08:07We're treating you for an overactive thyroid.
08:09We think that's why you passed out and couldn't move.
08:10Can you wiggle your fingers for me?
08:14Is he going to be okay?
08:16Excuse me, but only family members are allowed.
08:18Uh, it's okay.
08:20There are students.
08:22Everyone back at school is so worried about you.
08:25Is he sick because of the explosion?
08:29What explosion?
08:31What explosion?
08:32What explosion?
08:32A chemistry demonstration he was doing for his class went wrong.
08:35Why was it not already in the patient history?
08:37Because the patient was unconscious.
08:41But I'm assuming Dr. House spoke to the wife.
08:43The wife didn't know about the explosion.
08:45And I was the one who questioned her, so if there was an oversight, it was mine.
08:52Does Dr. House not attach importance to patient histories?
08:55No.
08:55He thinks they're crucial.
08:56He just doesn't think being in the same room as the patient is crucial.
09:02House thinks avoiding patients allows him to stay as objective as possible.
09:09He's not wrong.
09:12Sounds like a very diplomatic way of saying he's lazy.
09:15That's also true.
09:17Either way, I'm covered.
09:18If you want an accurate patient history, don't ever talk to the patient.
09:22Everybody lies.
09:25Except me.
09:26To you.
09:28Would never do that.
09:29Okay, so you're right.
09:31If you had actually been in the room questioning the patient, you could read body language.
09:37You could ask follow-up questions.
09:40Warn him of the costs of lying to you.
09:43Don't forget the thumb screws.
09:47Can you dispute the possibility that had you visited the patient sooner, maybe talked to the wife,
09:52been directed to one of the students, that this case might have ended very differently?
09:59It wasn't exactly an explosion.
10:02It was a controlled reaction that went a little haywire.
10:07It was, too, an explosion.
10:09Simon Harris filmed the whole thing on his camera phone and posted it on YouTube.
10:12It got, like, over 75,000 hits already.
10:15Looks like you've gone viral, hon.
10:22We had loss of consciousness, temporary paralysis.
10:26But when I was told that the patient coughed up blood, that things really started to get interesting.
10:35Your patient was doubled over in pain and coughing up blood, and you found that interesting.
10:41Why is that bad?
10:45It's interesting.
10:53I do this demonstration every year.
10:56I usually have a student aide help me set it up.
10:59Apparently this year, he added extra hydrofluoric acid, which is why it exploded.
11:04The student aide was just trying to make a viral video, not hurt anyone.
11:09Ended up doing both.
11:11So we figured the patient inhaled the extra large dose of hydrofluoric acid and burned his lungs, which is why
11:16he coughed up blood.
11:17If only burnt lungs explain the passing out and paralysis.
11:20The explosion does.
11:21Check out the video again.
11:22He smacked his head against the wall.
11:24If that caused swelling in his brain stem, that would have led to eventual loss of consciousness and paralysis.
11:29So we discussed it a little longer, and House decided to treat with heparin.
11:38I wouldn't mind a couple more details.
11:42It was aerosolized heparin.
11:45You skipped over the actual DDX, and now you're averting your eyes.
11:50I'm growing more and more curious by the moment.
11:57He smacked his head against the wall.
11:58If that caused swelling in his brain stem, that would have led to eventual loss of consciousness and paralysis.
12:04Nobody move!
12:05Ah!
12:07He had on a what?
12:08Gas mask.
12:15The stink bomb was Chase's.
12:18He was getting revenge for the orange hair and rigged it in House's office.
12:24But House found it.
12:28Mhm.
12:32You can leave when I have an answer.
12:33Well, I hope if we need the question.
12:35How do we treat chemical burns inside the lungs?
12:40Maybe we could use a bronchoalveolar lavage to wash them out with water?
12:43Sorry. My fault. Should have clarified.
12:45How do we treat chemical burns inside the lungs without killing the patient?
12:50Silver esophilodiazine works with all the chemical burns.
12:53Burn cream would drown him faster than water.
12:55Well?
12:58Aerosolized heparin.
13:02We like you.
13:03But that's only experimental that's never actually been used before.
13:06Not true.
13:07Been using Sheba.
13:09Uh-huh.
13:14The guy was going downhill fast.
13:15We needed a treatment. There was a slope-changer.
13:19So you busted out the sulfur dioxide stink bomb?
13:22It's a team-building exercise.
13:23No. It was manipulation.
13:25You were pressuring your team into coming up with unsafe medical ideas just to get out of that room.
13:30You say pressure? I say inspire.
13:34The usual safe ideas were not gonna work.
13:37Aerosolized heparin might.
13:38And everyone else just went along with this?
13:41No. I told House I thought it was a mistake.
13:45And those were your exact words.
13:48I think I might have said insane.
13:50You thought it was insane, and yet you let it happen.
13:53No, I...
13:54If you disagree with Dr. House on patient safety, doctor, it is your duty to speak up, otherwise you are
13:58equally to blame.
13:59I did speak up. I tried.
14:00And you failed.
14:03And that's why I went to Dr. Foreman.
14:10The heparin could cause the patient to bleed into his lungs even faster.
14:14It is crazy.
14:15But House doesn't do crazy just for crazy's sake.
14:18He thinks this is the only way to help the patient.
14:25You did not tell me you were involved in this case when you asked me to do this.
14:30I wasn't.
14:33The heparin decision didn't have anything to do with the outcome.
14:37If signing off on everything House does is a pattern, it affects the way House behaves, it affects the way
14:43House's team reacts to the way House behaves.
14:46House...
14:48is brilliant.
14:50I give him the benefit of the doubt most of the time, because I've seen what he can do.
14:55Getting House out of prison is the biggest decision you've made as Dean of Medicine.
14:58Right?
15:00And if he's suspended as a result of this hearing, he violates his parole and he goes back.
15:06And that probably leaves you as former Dean of Medicine.
15:11I suppose so.
15:15You didn't choose me to oversee this because you thought I could be objective.
15:19You chose me because you thought I'd have your back and I'd think twice about making a decision that would
15:24get you fired.
15:29Eric.
15:31I'm sorry.
15:33But if your get House out of jail free experiment blows up in your face, it's not my job to
15:40get you out of it.
15:50After you'd administered the heparin, I see there was a discharge order on the chart and yet the patient never
15:54left.
15:56House ordered a therapeutic bath first to wash off any residual chemicals from the blast.
16:02But we wound up finding something.
16:04You have a bit of a rash. Can you raise both your arms?
16:07Just need to see how far it goes.
16:12You told me I was going to be okay.
16:15And now there's still something wrong with me.
16:18It probably doesn't mean anything, but we want to make sure.
16:22Of course you do.
16:24I've got to get out of here, okay?
16:27Just relax.
16:29It'll just take a minute. We just need to get a good look at the rash.
16:32The rash? That was nothing. Just some irritation from lying in bed all day.
16:38The problem was the patient's brain. He freaked out.
16:42I got to get out of here.
16:46Freak out is a little strong.
16:48In my opinion at the time, it was the rash that was going to kill him.
16:52Invasive strep.
16:53Reasonable theory supported by the evidence?
16:55Evidence pointed to psychosis.
16:58We caused it by giving him steroids when he first came in.
17:01What did you think?
17:03I thought Park and Adams were both right, but that their conclusions were both wrong.
17:07The neurosymptoms and the rash were both signs of an underlying disease.
17:12Together with the lung, it added up to Wegner's.
17:18How does Dr. House handle it when three smart doctors come up with three different but equally valid ideas?
17:24I run a diagnostic trial.
17:32Start the patient on high dose steroids. Multiple birds, single stone.
17:37If Taub is right, he can walk out of here cured.
17:41If Adams is right, he'll spike a fever, get hypotensive, we can treat it, he can walk out of here
17:45cured.
17:46If Park is right, he goes all cuckoo's nest on us, we can cross brain off the list, diagnose him,
17:52he can walk out of here cured.
17:54Are you trying to make this easy for me?
17:55By your own admission, if you give the patient steroids, two of the three outcomes are going to make him
18:00worse.
18:00What was making the patient worse was not having a diagnosis. This was the fastest way to get it.
18:05It was a perfect diagnostic moment.
18:08In light of what happened, you still think it was the perfect diagnostic moment?
18:16Yes.
18:19My theory accounted for all the medical outcomes.
18:25It did not account for the disobedience of my own team.
18:33What are you doing?
18:34I think you're right about the strep.
18:36I had to biopsy the rash while we're waiting.
18:39Thanks.
18:43At the time, it seemed like a good idea.
18:49I know this is hard, but please tell me exactly what happened next.
18:58Draw up a little anesthetic.
19:02Two cc's. Lidocaine.
19:08Get away from me!
19:14Get out of the hospital.
19:22Calm down.
19:27So your position is that your team's disobedience caused this?
19:30That's not what I said.
19:32You said you didn't anticipate their defiance.
19:33You implied that all would have been fine otherwise.
19:37So who do you blame?
19:38Dr. Adams or Dr. Chase?
19:40Or both?
19:44I don't blame either one.
19:47So who do you blame, Dr. House?
19:59Help me!
20:03Get out of the hospital!
20:04Get out!
20:05Get out!
20:21Oh, my God.
20:23Chase.
20:41Don't be a wire. Get it, Garni. Start making more.
20:48Come on. Where's the media?
20:54Got it.
20:55Which artery?
20:57It's his heart.
21:02Fortunately, only the knife tip reached the cardiac muscle, made a laceration in the left ventricle about the size of
21:08the tip of my index finger.
21:09At that moment, he could only stay alive as long as my finger plugged the hole.
21:16It could have been me on the floor. It should have been me.
21:20It was my theory. I held the needle in front of the patient that set off his paranoia.
21:26If you're looking for someone to blame, blame me.
21:34Please continue.
21:37Getting some ectomy.
21:38Coming through.
21:39Good chronic pulse.
21:40Right, you are?
21:40No.
21:42Got a PVC.
21:43Remove it, people.
21:48My diagnostic test worked to prove the patient had a steroid-induced psychosis.
21:52That's what you took away from the situation.
21:54The brain was not a symptom of an underlying disease.
21:57Your colleague was stabbed.
21:58Are you telling me you didn't care?
22:04How bad is it?
22:05Bad.
22:06Match.
22:11Ready?
22:11I can't take my finger out. He'll bleed. I don't think he can take it.
22:14Oxygenase is 100%. He's as ready as he's gonna be.
22:17You gotta go for it.
22:19My count.
22:21One.
22:23Two.
22:24Three.
22:28Suture.
22:31Got it.
22:33BP is stable.
22:35That's just holding.
22:39What was his heart rate?
22:42He doesn't have one. He's on bypass.
22:44Not Chase. The patient.
22:48You're DDX-ing?
22:50Park. Come with me.
22:52Tob's got this.
22:53My friend is here because you didn't listen to me.
22:56I did listen to you. Chase didn't listen to me.
23:00At this point, being here makes you feel better.
23:02You're not helping Chase or our patient.
23:06Fine.
23:08So he just walked out?
23:09There really was nothing for him to do.
23:11Speaks to a certain callousness on Dr. House's part, don't you think?
23:13Who cares if House was callous? Are you gonna punish callousness?
23:17But you agree that empathy is a useful quality for doctors?
23:20House is not the problem.
23:21Your friend got stabbed. He may die from those wounds.
23:25If you had been in that room, maybe that could have been you.
23:28I wouldn't have been in the room.
23:31Implicitly, you just said that Chase was at fault.
23:38We all knew a psychotic episode was one of the three possible outcomes.
23:43And Chase brought a scalpel in there.
23:46He endangered Dr. Adams, he endangered himself, and he endangered the patient.
24:54Lungs, rash, now excessive, are our variability.
24:58Go.
25:07It's a hospital. There are lots of doctors who can take care of him.
25:10Your thinking is that only you guys are qualified to sit in this room doing nothing.
25:15If you're motivated by caring, just bear in mind that he's a dedicated chemistry teacher with a pretty wife,
25:20an adoring student, baby on the way.
25:22She's not pregnant.
25:24Would it make a difference? Is that could knock her up?
25:27Autonomic dysregulation.
25:28Shut up!
25:30You guys keep it down.
25:38You made it, bud.
25:41You're in the PACU.
25:43Been in surgery. The anesthesia's just wearing off.
25:47Did I have an epidural?
25:50Uh, no.
25:54I can't feel my legs.
26:08Dr. Chase?
26:12Robert?
26:14Yeah.
26:19I'm Walter Cofield.
26:21I'm a neurologist over at...
26:23I know who you are.
26:26Good.
26:32Think you're up for answering a couple questions?
26:36Well, it's not like I can get up and run away.
26:42It wasn't my best job.
26:46I'm smiling because for the last 12 hours I've been picturing you with orange hair.
26:55I taught it back.
27:01Yeah.
27:09Were you angry with Dr. House?
27:12It was a prank.
27:14It wasn't uncommon.
27:16So I've heard.
27:17It doesn't mean you couldn't get angry.
27:19It might actually contribute to that reaction.
27:21Can I ask why that matters?
27:24Are you trying to prove that I was distracted?
27:27That my judgment was compromised?
27:31Who do you think was at fault for what happened to you, Dr. Chase?
27:34Again?
27:36Why does it matter?
27:38You're a smart doctor.
27:39You know what happened here better than anyone,
27:41and you've worked with Dr. House longer than anyone.
27:43And I suspect that you've spent every minute since this has happened
27:48trying to answer that very question.
27:53I don't think it was anyone's fault.
27:57I was angry, but I wasn't distracted.
28:02And I think that if there's any chance I'm going to walk again,
28:05it's because Dr. House is a genius.
28:09What about warmth? Can you feel the sheets on your skin?
28:11I just said I don't feel anything.
28:15Objectivity, House.
28:22What about post-traumatic syringomyelia?
28:26A syrinx formed in the subarachnoid space,
28:28blocking the flow of the cerebrospinal fluid.
28:30You mean the damage is permanent?
28:34No.
28:36Forget the nerves.
28:37House, if it's total paralysis, he must have...
28:40Not necessarily.
28:41Think arteries.
28:42Blood flow to his spinal column is cut off.
28:45It's a clot in the radicular artery.
28:46That could be fixable.
28:48Wrap a room for an amyloctomy.
28:50Let's get that thing out of there before it does any more damage.
28:52And if it's not a clot?
28:54You can ask Foreman if hospital insurance covers ramp bands.
29:00You're through the aorta.
29:02There.
29:03Since your level is at L5, it must be the descending branch.
29:07Can I see the monitor?
29:09Stop there. Shoot the die.
29:15There it is.
29:16Don't get too excited. You still gotta get it out.
29:19You still could have done permanent damage.
29:25The patient does not have autonomic dysregulation.
29:28There's blood in his urine bag. Kidneys are failing.
29:30House, not now.
29:31Gotta be now.
29:31Foreman is transferring our guy to Princeton General as soon as there's a bed available.
29:35Says the doctors here can no longer be objective since the stabbing.
29:40In the middle of a procedure that could basically save your life,
29:45House is actually trying to drag people away?
29:49How do you work with a guy like that?
29:50He wasn't trying to pull anybody away.
29:53Everyone had already refused to work on that case.
29:55He knew the answer.
29:58He wanted to check on me, but he needed an excuse.
30:02Otherwise, he could be accused of caring.
30:07So, your testimony is that Dr. House's complete lack of concern is evidence of his deep concern?
30:16No.
30:22Did you just do that?
30:26What?
30:33Where were your toes?
30:48Do you feel that?
30:52Congratulations.
30:53It was the clot.
30:55Short occlusion time of the artery.
30:58When the swelling goes down, you should gain back at least some of the function.
31:10One more thing, sorry.
31:13You knew that your patient was at risk for a psychotic break when you brought a scalpel within his reach.
31:21Why did you ignore that risk?
31:25I thought I was right about the rash.
31:29I would do it again.
31:36I thought so.
31:39Well, that's it. I thought so.
31:42What the hell was that, mate?
31:46You brazenly defied your boss.
31:50Now, that happened either because Dr. House has established that that's okay in his world,
31:59or his prank war distracted you, or House makes medicine a game and you just wanted to beat him.
32:05Whatever the reason, it boils down to the fact that you may never walk again,
32:11because House created an atmosphere that promotes recklessness.
32:37This will be our last round of questions.
32:45Spoken with Dr. Chase, you know he regained movement.
32:50No.
33:04Are you really this indifferent to the fact that Dr. Chase is hurt?
33:09We're going off the record because this is irrelevant, or are you going to hit me?
33:14Why don't you go tell the guy you're sorry?
33:16I didn't do anything wrong.
33:17It's not an admission of guilt. He's your friend, and he's not well.
33:20He's a co-worker.
33:21A co-worker whom you've known for almost ten years, who nearly died,
33:25and who's still scared he may not walk.
33:29Are you going to have me fired for bad manners?
33:37I'm just trying to understand you.
33:39Why a man in your position, with your abilities,
33:43is incapable of shaking the impulse to act like an ass.
33:46If you go back on the record, get this over with.
33:53Put the Vicodin away, Dr. House.
33:56My leg hurts.
34:04That's supposed to be funny.
34:16Two explosions.
34:26We're not done here.
34:33Hey, hold on.
34:36Close it up.
34:37Take him out of there.
34:38Dr. Foreman said you'd try this.
34:40I said to tell you he's no longer a patient.
34:43Let's go.
34:45Hey!
34:56Wait!
35:00Wait!
35:01I have to get to my car.
35:03I don't...
35:03Your husband has a tumor in his lymph nodes.
35:07You've been wrong every time.
35:08You know what? Not this time.
35:09An explosion in the classroom caused the cancer cells to break open.
35:13It's called tumor lysis syndrome.
35:15His body's flooded with an excess of phosphates, potassium acids,
35:19all kinds of cancerous junk.
35:20It explains the paralysis, the bleeding, the heart and kidney issues, everything.
35:27What about the psychotic break?
35:31Turns out, we caused that.
35:38This is treatable, okay?
35:40You have to tell the new doctors that he needs total body radiation and plasmapheresis.
35:45Move your cane, please.
36:00Where's Cofield?
36:02He said you walked out.
36:03Well, I'm walking back and I've done testifying.
36:06Apparently you were.
36:07Said he'd have his decision tomorrow.
36:30Okay.
36:57I'm walking for them though.
37:06I don't know.
37:37I don't know.
37:58This case is a fiasco.
38:00I didn't sleep last night.
38:08Dr. House is obviously brilliant.
38:11Well, I think we've heard enough.
38:13But Dr. House is also a fiasco.
38:16If I were to exonerate him, condone his completely reckless, immature, almost misanthropic behavior,
38:24I would essentially be sending a message to all the other doctors in this hospital, and it's okay to act
38:27that way.
38:28And it's...
38:29Sorry.
38:30We're in the middle of something?
38:31I know.
38:32I came to speak with Dr. House, and when they told me he was in here, I thought I should
38:37say something.
38:40I mean, he wasn't the nicest doctor I've ever met.
38:45Well, I think we've heard enough.
38:47But he was right.
38:51They found the tumor.
38:53They are removing it, and they are starting plasmapheresis.
38:56They expect a full recovery.
39:01He saved my husband's life.
39:06Well, I guess that's it.
39:10Thanks again.
39:25As I was saying, Dr. House's process is dangerous.
39:30Inappropriate.
39:35But he is effective.
39:39I've decided that I would be doing this hospital a disservice if I did anything to change that process.
39:49Congratulations, Dr. House.
39:50This unfortunate stabbing incident is officially nobody's fault.
40:16Coward.
40:19Excuse me?
40:20You've got like 20 pages of notes there.
40:22You were expecting to bore us for at least half an hour.
40:28You got my parole form in here.
40:30You're going to send me back to prison.
40:32House, stop.
40:33Good things usually happen.
40:35Bad things sometimes happen.
40:37The fact that that would-be widow came in just in time to sob all over your soft, mushy heart.
40:42The fact that her husband's going to live does not change whether or not I did the right thing.
40:55Oh, my God.
41:21How did you get the firing wire into the Vicodin bottle without me noticing?
41:27What did I even have to?
41:30What was the point of the orange hair?
41:33Your hair smelled like Adam's.
41:35It's just there's no way that you're doing her without me knowing.
41:38It means you're just doing her shampoo.
41:40Which means you were out late drinking with some new girl.
41:43Or because there is no new girl.
41:45You try to make up time by showering at the hospital.
41:48You're too lazy to buy your own shampoo.
41:50So I found a way to let you know to not be late.
41:53You couldn't just house me yourself being late?
41:55What fun would that be?
42:00None of this is fun.
42:01House?
42:11They decided that you were being stabbed.
42:17It was nobody's fault.
42:29They're wrong.
42:34I'm sorry.
42:41Anything else?
42:43I'm kind of busy.
42:54Nope.
42:55That was it.
42:59I've got it.
43:53That's some bad hat, Harry.
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