"Previously on "Everwood"..." "I'm afraid my cancer's gonna ruin our chances of adoption." "It must have crossed your mind." "Do you really think they're gonna give a child to someone who's less than a year out of chemotherapy?" "I think we'll be fine." " Really?" " Really." "That sucks." "Think they made a mistake?" "No, my GPA's on life support." "You know, I've been behind from day one, and now it's snowballed." "I don't see how they expect us to keep up." "There's so much work, they want everyone to fail." "Tony Tiggerello." "Ada, hey!" " Problems in the boudoir?" " Yeah." "That is a shame given you're at your sexual peak and all." "Hey, why don't we get out of town this weekend?" "Let's do something really fun." "Sounds great!" "Where do you want to go?" "I don't know." "We can go to the mountains." "Or we could go to New Mexico." "We can go to Italy." "We can't afford to go to Italy." "Well, if we rob a bank or steal a car, then we could, or we could steal a plane." "Are you okay?" "You're acting a little weirder than usual." "No." "I mean, yes, I am okay." "I'm just goofing around." "All that time for a muffin?" "It's not just a muffin." "It's a white-chocolate-chip muffin." "They're very rare." "I almost had to take this old lady out to get this." " Have you ever been to peak falls?" " No." " You haven't?" " No." "Oh, my god." "It's like a two-mile hike." "It's beautiful!" "I could pack a picnic." "That's perfect." "What's the occasion?" "Do I need some kind of occasion to hang out with my girl?" "No, but you need a special occasion to use the term, "my girl." I don't think this is it." "Why don't you come with us?" "No, that's okay, the thought of me picnicking with you guys takes the third-wheel thing to a new level I'm not comfortable with." "We need to find you somebody." "Bright, can you think of anyone?" "Think." "That was fast." "Mmm, yeah." "Okay, someone like her, only less." "Someone smarter, sweeter." "Dude, we know her." " What's her name again?" " I don't know." "No, you do know." "Remember you took me when we got our fake I.D.s?" "Is that Ada?" "Ada?" "Hey." "Hi, I'm Bright Abbott." "This is my girlfriend " " Hannah." " Hi." " Hi." "Nice to meet you." "Hey." "Ephram Brown." "You probably remember me as Gus Walberg." "Or not." "That's okay, too." "Muffin?" "Sure, thank you." ""Stitch and Bitch"?" "Oh, I'm starting this circle at my store." "You should come by." "That actually sounds really fun." "Thanks." "Anyways, well, I'm gonna go find some more recruits." "It was really nice to meet you." "Thank you so much for the muffin." " See you guys later." "Bye." " Bye." "Okay, I'm a horrible person." "She seems really nice." "She knits." "Oh, you know!" "I should go make you a scarf!" "No, I hate scarves." "They're suffocating." "They kind of strangle you." "They're really scratchy " "Dude, why are you acting so weird right now?" "No, I'm fine." "I need a little water." "I'll be right back." "You all right?" "You look a little sick." "Maybe 'cause it's like a sauna in here." "Did you crank up the heat before you left?" "No, actually, it's freezing cold." "When are you gonna tell me what's going on with that look between you and Ada?" "Who?" "Don't even try that on me." "Ada." "You know Ada." "You were in love with her through all of high school." "I was not in love with her." "You don't talk about other chicks around your girlfriend." "It's not cool." "Okay, yeah, it doesn't count when you're talking about Ada." "That's like having a crush on Heidi Klum." "You can't get in trouble for that." "Are you cleaning right now?" "Yes, I am." "Why?" "What's with all the questions?" "What?" "I can't clean?" "I can't have a clean place to live?" "Did you hook up with her?" "What?" "No." "No, I did not." "No." "Yeah, you did." "You totally did, dude." "That is awesome." "Why didn't you tell me?" "Can we please drop it?" "No, we can't drop it." "Why are you being so weird?" "I'm not being weird." "Yeah, you are." "When did this happen?" "Was it that summer after we got my I.D.?" "Last week." "That I did not expect." "It was a terrible mistake." "I will never, ever, ever do it again." "What happened?" "I mean, how..." "She was on campus." "She had, like, this big table that she couldn't fit in the back of the car, so I said, "hey, why don't you use my truck?"" "And I brought the table over to her new store, and we were talking, and it just happened." ""It"?" "Did you sleep with her?" "That's bad." "I know." "Okay, uh, what are you gonna tell Hannah?" "I mean, what are you -- how are you gonna say it?" "I'm not gonna tell Hannah anything." "You're just gonna pretend like nothing happened?" "Pretty much, yeah." "You sure you can live with that?" "I guess I'm gonna have to." "I think of him, and I remember there's always a reason to try again." "I think of him, and I can hope to hope." "Thank you." "Don't be shy." "He's actually a pretty nice fella." "Really?" "You want him to sign your book?" "Oh, well, I was thinking about it." "Come on." "I'll take it to him." "I'm his wife." "Who should he make it out to?" "How about to his daughter?" "Cassie!" "Hey, daddy!" "Take care, Henry." "Lee Kelsey called, and the adoption agency." "They have a few questions about Dr. Abbott." "Aha!" "Looks like I finally get to unload all that dirt I have on you, Harold." "May I speak to you for a moment?" "Sure." "So, about the interview." "Don't worry." "I won't bring up you shoplifting that pack of gum, nor will I tell any inappropriate jokes." "Really, I can be impressively serious when I put my mind to it." "It's not that." "It's about something I've done, something I did in haste." "I'm finding myself in somewhat of a pickle." "I'm not sure how to handle it." ""Pickle," huh?" "Oh, that is serious." "I'm sorry, Harold." "What is it?" "On the application I submitted for our adoption, on the part that says medical history..." "I omitted any mention of her cancer." "That's a pretty big omission." "You could call them and tell them it was a mistake." "Let them know not only are the Abbotts a medical risk, they're also big, fat liars?" "No, I " " I doubt somehow that that would help." "Andy, I-I wish I could undo what I did, but it's too late." "I'm hoping for a miracle." "I only need to have this hidden for a few more months, just until Rose and I get our child." "It's more than a few months." "I mean, this secret -- this information could come out at any time, even after you get the child." "I have kept bigger secrets for you." "I know you have, and I'd do this for you regardless." "You don't need to worry about this, Andy." "It's my problem." "It sits on my shoulders." "I'm so glad you're here." "I'll see you tomorrow." "Well, good to see she still hates my white ass." "Oh, come on, now." "You sure were getting along like gangbusters." "I never knew the two of you were so close." "Well, we haven't talked in a while -- a lot to catch up on." "So maybe you should go to that dinner alone." "You don't need me there." "I want you there." "You just got to give Cassie some time to warm up to you." "Time isn't gonna help." "She's had five years to get used to it, Harper." "Cassie never came to our wedding, she never came to visit." "She doesn't want to, and we both know why." "She doesn't like the idea that you're married to a white woman." "Well, your family didn't like it too much, either, not to mention the whole town." "Well, my family didn't like it because we got married two months after Harold senior died." "And as for the town, you're right." "But they got over it, unlike Cassie." "She'll get over it, too." "Once she gets to know you, she's gonna see what I see, and she's gonna love you." "So, you want to see "Pride and Prejudice." What is that about -- racism?" "Yeah, well, sure." "Listen, we'll do whatever you want, darling." "Yeah." "Fine." "I'll see you in a minute, then." "Love you." "Bye." "Hannah's coming over." "Where you going?" "I don't know, I'm just gonna go out to the library or something." "You don't have to go anywhere." "We're only gonna be here for a couple minutes." "Hey, no." "It's cool." "All right, what's up, man?" "Speak your mind." "No, it's none of my business." "I just don't want to be here when Hannah's here." "It's no big deal." "If you leave every time Hannah comes over, it's gonna turn into a big deal." "Look, I don't want to tell you what you can or can't do." "I just don't want to be here when you do it." "All right?" " When I do what?" " Lie to her and stuff." "Damn, must be easy living in your world, huh?" "Never do anything wrong, never make any mistakes." " I never said that." " This is such crap, dude." "How many times have I had your back, huh?" "How about the time you were totally screwing my sister over?" "I never cheated on Amy -- if I did, you would have kicked my ass, and I would have deserved it." "Do you ever get tired of being this judgmental?" "I-I-I'm sorry, but I just -- it sucks what you did to her." "I feel bad for her." "I think that " " Never mind." " What?" "You just think that..." "What?" "This could have been avoided if you trusted your gut." "You wanted to break up months ago." "You were the one who told me I should break up with her." "It was you who thought we would never work out." "So, you know what?" "Screw you!" "Because you're the one who put this in my head, and it's probably because it was you, my friend, why it stuck." "Oh, so this is all my fault?" " You know it's your fault." " You're so full of " "What's going on?" "I could hear yelling all the way down the hall." "See you." "You okay?" "What happened?" "Nothing." "I'm gonna go get my jacket." "Bright, come on, what's going on?" "No, it's nothing." "It's fine." "Hey." "Thanks for meeting me." "I know you're probably really busy." "No, no, it's fine." "How's life?" "Good, good, fine." "How's life with you?" "Good." "I'm really enjoying this international-relations class that I'm taking." "I'm thinking about learning mandarin." "Wow, that's, uh... sounds harder than spanish, but probably way more important." "Are there a lot of mandarin people in Everwood?" "You know what?" "I know you only have 10 minutes, and I really need to talk, so could we just skip the fake nice stuff and push straight on through the weird?" "Yes, please." "What happened?" "Well, nothing actually happened." "It's just..." "Bright?" "Yes." "I just feel like there's this huge wall between us that you can't see but I can totally feel, and everything is just off." "He's even fighting with Ephram." "Really?" "Maybe I'm being paranoid." "I just feel he's pulling away from everyone, and I don't know why." "Has he talked to you at all?" "No, I haven't talked to him since that dinner." "I think he's still mad." "But I could talk to Ephram if you wanted." "I don't want to make you do that if it's too weird." "No, no." "I'm happy to, really." "But, honestly, I wouldn't worry." "Knowing Bright, it's something really stupid." "This is a guy who broke his hand trying to karate-chop a piece of wood in half." "Yeah." "Probably shouldn't let him watch those Bruce Lee movies anymore." "No." " Hey." " Hey, Dr. Hartman, Reid Bardem." "Thank you so much for taking the time to meet with me." "Absolutely." "Have a seat." "I got to keep the hands strong." "Yeah." "So, what could I do for you, Reid?" "Well, I'm in my first year at med school over at AM, and so I'm looking for an office to intern at this quarter." "I was hoping maybe you could use someone." "Are you interested in plastic surgery?" "Well, not really." "I came here because I know you work solo and that your office is always busy." "Plus, I heard you were the coolest doctor in town." "That I am." "Well, I was really just looking for, you know, something that will give me an edge when I apply to residencies." "Can I try that?" " Oh, yeah, sure." " Thanks." "This is cool." "So, do you have any clinical experience yet?" "Um, yeah." "I've been working at the clinic on campus since I started." "Before that, I was an EMT for two years." "And -- oh!" "And last summer I volunteered over at the hospital, so..." "You're really on the ball, Reid." "And you have shockingly strong hands." "Yes, I think I could use you around here, if for no other reason than I think you could probably lift really heavy stuff." "Really?" "Yes." "Wow, this is great." "I -- you will not regret this." "I think this is my advisor." "Do you mind?" "Go ahead." "Go ahead." "Hello?" "Hey -- hey, Dr. Franco." "Yeah." "Do you mind telling me what this is about?" "Okay, yeah." "I'll see you tomorrow." "Everything okay?" "Yeah, yeah." "Med school." "The professors are always on you about something." "Yeah, I remember it well." "I got to get to my next patient, okay?" "I'll have Edna give you a call." "All right." "Thank you, really." "You got it." "So, what made you decide to write it?" "I didn't even know you read fiction." "Well, it's something I always wanted to do but never seemed to find the time for." "Then I got laid off from my job and was moping around the house, and finally Edna couldn't take it anymore." "She found a beautiful office for me." "Then he had no more excuses." "Oh, honey." "Mmm, I'll do it." "Good girl." "She's usually asleep by this time." "I'll be right back." "I can't stand to hear her cry." "It kills me." "Is my vision failing or does that guy look white to you?" "I'm as shocked as you are." "I guess that blows your whole racist theory out of the water." "If she's so down with whity, what's she got against me?" "She still doesn't trust me with Olivia." "Apparently, I don't swaddle tightly enough." "So, how did you and Cassie meet again?" "Through friends." "Harold is an extraordinary husband and father." "I'm constantly going to him for parenting advice." "He could be the next Dr. Phil." "What do you mean by that?" "Well, I mean that Harold gives great advice just like Dr. Phil." "Although, I've never actually seen his show." "I'm more of an Oprah man myself." "What about that book club?" "Am I right?" "What do you see as the Abbotts' greatest weakness as potential adoptive parents?" "Oh." "Well, that's a hard one." "Maybe Harold's a little too organized." "He likes to have things in their place." "Do you think that will be a problem with a young child running around the house?" "Oh, no, no, no." "I mean, he's already raised two children." "I'm sure their house was very chaotic when they were growing up." "Uh, I don't mean more chaotic than normal, just normal chaos, funny chaos, like a Neil Simon play." "You go to the theater much?" "You seem nervous, Dr. Brown." "Me?" "No, no, no, no." "I'm just a little fidgety." "I probably just... have to pee." "I've also noticed that you've been talking mostly about Dr. Abbott." "Is there a reason you've been avoiding discussing Mrs. Abbott?" "No, no." "I just " " I work very closely with Harold every day, and as a character witness, I have more to say about his character." "But if there's something about Rose specifically " "I'm sorry." "That's my boss." "I have to get back." " One last thing." " Oh, good." "I mean... what?" "Is there anything about the Abbotts that you think makes them less-than-ideal candidates or any last thing you think we should know about them?" "Yes, there is, actually." "I can't think of two people on this earth who would make better parents than Harold and Rose Abbott." "Okay." "So, how do things look for them?" "I can't really comment on that." "It mostly depends on how the foreign orphanage and their government feels about the Abbotts." "Thank you for your time." "My pleasure." "Can I give you a hand with that?" "Nope, I'm good." "Listen, Cassie." "Help me out here 'cause I'm a little confused." "I know you don't like me, but I always thought it was because you weren't keen on interracial relationships." "Of course you think that." "Look, we don't have to be bosom buddies, but wouldn't it be nice if we could get along for your father's sake?" "For my father's sake?" "I don't hear so much as boo from you all this time, and you're telling me you care about me and my dad?" "Of course I care." "I know you don't see each other very often, but " "I think we all know whose fault that is." "You're worse than my mother." "Excuse me?" "You must be some sort of high-maintenance lady because ever since my father married you, I haven't seen him." "Not once in five years." "I was starting to think you had him ball-gagged in the closet somewhere." "Look, your father not calling you has nothing to do with me." "It has everything to do with you." "Did you have any idea we had a trip planned to South America?" "No, I didn't." "Well, it was all planned." "Then I get a phone call the night before we were supposed to leave." "I'm packing my bag, I'm loading my camera, and I'm on top of the world." "I'm thinking he's calling to tell me what time he'd be there to pick me up the next morning." "But instead, he's calling to tell me that he wouldn't be able to make the trip after all because he was marrying you." "I don't know what to say." "This is the first time I've heard of any of this." "My dad has always been a bit of a wanderer." "That's the one thing that my mother could never understand, that he wouldn't be happy staying put at home playing house with her." "And somehow you managed to do just that, huh?" "Now, I'm sorry." "I'm not about to make friends with the woman who's keeping my father away from me." " Oh, hey, Dr. Brown." " Hey, Amy." "Come on in." " Hey, Delia." " Hey." "Did you get shorter?" "No, but I think you got a little bit taller." "Well, this feels like old times." "You want to stay for dinner?" "We're making pizza." "Oh, I'm sorry." "I can't." "Um, is Ephram..." " Living room." " Cool." "Thank you." "When are you going to start playing stuff I can sing to?" "If you can't sing along to Rachmaninoff, then I don't think I can help you." "Are you just here to practice, or is something else going on?" "What do you mean?" "I know you're avoiding the apartment." "I talked to Hannah." "She said that you and Bright are fighting or something." "Yeah, well, yeah, but kind of, but it's nothing." "I'm sure it will blow over eventually." "What happened?" "I can't really talk to you about it." "Why not?" "Is it about me?" "No." "Then who is it about?" "You don't want to know." "Trust me." "It's bad." "I wish I didn't know." "Hey... we've already tried to keep things from each other, and it doesn't really work." "You wind up in Europe, I wind up a women's studies major." "You're right." "That's bad." "I just want you to know that I'm your friend, and if you're struggling with something, I'm here for you." "Maybe I could help in some way." "Bright cheated on Hannah." "You mean he actually..." "Yeah." "How did you find out?" "Did you walk in on them?" "No, no, God, no." "Now I know there would have been a worse way for it to go down." "Thank you for that." "How did " " I mean, who -- no, forget it." "Never mind." "I don't even want to know." "Who?" "It doesn't matter." "It's nobody you know." "Somebody." "Hannah's gonna die when she finds out." "Yeah, well, she's not gonna find out." "He's not gonna tell her." " What?" " It sucks." "I know." " He has to tell her." " No, he's not." "Trust me." "I tried talking to him about it already." "Is he crasy?" "Does he think he's just gonna lie to Hannah, and I'm not gonna do anything about it?" "Actually, you can't do anything because, technically, you don't know anything about it." "But " "I never would have told you if I thought for a second you were gonna go to Hannah." "Fine, I'll just talk to him." "No, A-Amy." "We can't just let him do this, Ephram." "He already did it." "It's not our business how he " "Of course it's our business." "Hannah's my best friend!" "Okay, and Bright is my best friend." "So you're defending him?" "No, I'm not defending him." "I think the whole thing sucks." "I can't even go by the apartment 'cause I don't want to run into Hannah" " and feel like I'm lying to her." " Exactly." "But I can't go behind Bright's back and betray his trust and try to get him to do something that he's not ready to do yet." "I'm sure he'll tell her eventually." "You're not sure of that at all." "Okay, I'm not sure, but I'd like to believe he will." "I'd like to believe that all men aren't pigs, but right now, you all totally are." "Okay, so I'm a pig now?" "You're part of the pig problem." "Look, I'm telling Hannah." "Amy, you're totally selling me out here." "Don't put this on me." "You're the one who told me about it." "What do you expect me to do?" "Yep, just like old times." " No, I didn't!" " Yes, you did..." "You drink any more champagne, and I'm gonna have to do your reading for you." "Oh, we still got a couple hours." "What do you say we go back to bed?" "I'm not exactly in the mood, Harper." "I'm still bristling over that dressing down I got from your daughter last night." "Oh, that's just Cassie." "She's always had fire in her belly." "That's not fire, that's anger." "I think Cassie's reacting to the fact that you're her stepmother." "Stepmothers and stepdaughters never get along." "They make Disney movies about it all the time." "Well, you're not exactly prince charming in this deal." "What does that mean?" "Look, I am willing to take the fall for you as far as Cassie is concerned." "She can hate me till hell freezes over, but she blames her mother, too." "That girl is mad at everyone except the person she should be mad at -- you." "Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't you the absentee father?" "Now you're just being belligerent." "Oh, honey, I am not trying to attack you." "Lord knows I've been a crappy mother and don't have a leg to stand on." "But it seems like that girl is carrying around a lot of pain, and you must be, too." "Why haven't you seen her in five years?" "I guess it always seemed easier not to." "I wasn't around much when Cassie was growing up, and when I see her, I feel guilty." "I feel like I owe her, like I have to make up for all that lost time." "You do owe her, and maybe you can't make up for that time." "I couldn't with Junior." "But you can do something about the present." "And risk losing what I have now." "What you have now isn't real... so what are you risking?" "Joining the peace corps?" "Hey." "No." "Bright and I are going camping this weekend at Peak Falls." "I think it might be exactly what we need -- just, you know, get out of town, do something fun." "Well, you seem a lot better." "Yeah!" "I am." "Yeah, I've decided to try the whole power-of-positive-thinking thing." "You know, I think I was probably being paranoid." "I'm always scared something's wrong with me and Bright, that we need to fix something." "Maybe I was the one that was off." "No, Hannah." "Sorry for bugging you with all this." "Are you kidding me?" "You can talk to me about anything anytime." "That's what I'm here for." "Does that mean we're not fighting anymore?" "No, we were never fighting, just working through some stuff." "I didn't cheat." "You got the highest score in the whole class despite the fact that you've been close to failing all year." "The school flags this kind of discrepancy right away." "No, I studied incredibly hard this time -- harder than I ever have." "I finally feel like I'm starting to get it." "Two students in the class came up to me separately and said they saw you using a crib sheet." "Who?" "You have two choices, Reid." "I'll do whatever I have to do to stay." "That's not an option." "This school has a zero-tolerance policy towards cheating." "You will be expelled." "No, but I..." "You can either admit what you did and apply somewhere else in a year or two... or you can fight the charges and guarantee no other school will ever accept you." "No, no, no." "See, I can't be expelled." "Aren't you guys listening to me?" "There's got to be someone else that I can talk to about this." "It can't just be over like this." "It is, Reid." "I'm sorry." "Is everything all right?" "The consulate did receive our I.N.S. forms?" "Everything is fine, better than fine, actually." "Hello." "I just wanted to drop this by in person." "More paperwork?" "I think I'm developing carpal tunnel from all this signing." "We found a match." "This is Chewe." "Your child." "Oh, my goodness." "He's 19 months old." "He's so beautiful." "Oh, I never dreamed." "My god, I can't believe this." "Oh, I know, sweetheart." "I know, I know." "Now, you'll want to review his records carefully and take your time to decide whether you want to commit yourself to this child." "But if you decide to go forward, it's just a matter of processing the paperwork to legally adopt Chewe." "Thank you, Madeline." "Thank you for everything you've done." "Congratulations." "And there's nothing else we need to do right now?" "Because I did contact another oncologist, and he's happy to be a second reference if the orphanage needs more assurance about my health." "Oncologist?" "Rose..." "What medical issues are you referring to, Mrs. Abbott?" "My cancer -- the spinal tumor I had removed last year." "It's all in your files -- the medical histories that Harold sent." "You sent the medical histories." "There's nothing in our records about you ever having had cancer." "I'm sorry." "I'm so very sorry." "So, Olivia's birthday's september 1st." "We're giving her a party, and Elmo's coming." "Is that the purple thing or the red thing?" "It's the red thing." "Dad, I know you're really busy with your tour, so if you can't make it, I understand." "But if you do come, I'll make sure that mom doesn't." "I think your mother and I can be in the same room together." "No, it's cool." "I'd much rather have you there than her." "Cassie... you've got to understand something." "I don't blame your mom for what happened to us." "She left me because I wasn't there enough and because I was a bad father to you." "Oh, dad, come on." "That's not true." "You were always my favorite, and I always felt closer to you." "And I always love that." "But the fact is, I wasn't there for you like she was." "Well, that's because she never let you." "She was always criticizing you, and she was never satisfied." "Listen to me, Cassie." "Your mom and I had our problems long before you were born." "But when you came along, I realized that I wasn't ready to be a father." "I couldn't handle it, and she felt that." "I guess I just..." "I guess I just thought you always had a good reason for leaving." "There's never a good reason for a father to leave his little girl." "And I don't know what your mom did all these years to protect me, but I don't deserve it." "And I don't want you blaming her anymore or anyone else for me not being around." "Come on, daddy." "We don't need to talk about that." "I couldn't handle it." "Dad, why are you saying all this to me right now?" "Because I want a real relationship with you, Cassie." "I don't want to lose any more time pretending." "I think it's too late for that, dad." "Yeah, come in." "I need to talk to you." "Well, I'm heading out the door, so..." "You're gonna have to tell Hannah the truth." "Ephram, that little son of a " "It's not his fault." "I made him tell me." "And you know what?" "And it doesn't matter because Hannah knows something's off." "She came to me to figure out what was going on." "So what?" "Okay, we're going out of town this weekend." "Everything is gonna go back to normal." "Sorry, no. 'Cause if you don't tell her, I will." "You have no right." "She's my best friend." "Best friend, my ass!" "You treated her like crap for months, and now you care again?" "I never stopped caring about her, and I can't believe that you have." "Oh, screw you!" "Okay, I love that girl more than I've ever loved anyone in my life!" "Then why did you do it?" "I made a mistake, okay?" "I screwed up." "It's never gonna happen again." "I know that." "But if you tell her..." "God, please don't tell her." "I know that you want to erase the bad thing that you did and pretend like it never even happened, but you can't." "And you know that you can't." "Because in some ways what you're doing to Hannah right now is worse than cheating." "You are making a fool out of her, Bright." "I don't even know why I did it." "This whole time I thought that I was missing out on something that I needed by being with Hannah." "What I realize is, Hannah is all I need, and now that I finally figured that out, I'm gonna lose her." "You don't know that." "You don't." "Tell her what you just told me just like that." "She's never gonna forgive me." " She might." " No." "But if you don't tell her now, you'll never get a chance." "Keeping a secret from someone that you love, even if you think you're doing it for all of the right reasons, is a betrayal." "Trust me." "I learned it the hard way last year." "Don't do what I did." "I just " " I don't want this to be over." "I know you don't." "If you would have waited five minutes, I could have gotten you that stuff for free." "Oh, that's okay." "I stole it." "So... talk to Bright?" "Yes, I did, and I'm sorry if you feel like I sold you out." "I just couldn't let that happen to Hannah." "No, it's okay." "I probably would have done the same thing if I was in your shoes." "I know you would have." "And since we're apologizing, I'm sorry I yelled at you." "Oh, please." "It's nothing I haven't been subjected to before." "I'm sorry I called you a pig." "Yeah, that was really uncalled for." "I just can't believe this is happening, you know?" "I feel so sad for them." "What's gonna happen?" "What do you think she's gonna do?" "I don't know." "What would you do?" "Would you have forgiven me?" "Probably not, but you would never have done what Bright did." "Yeah, true." "Only 'cause you would come after me with a knife." "I hate to say this." "It's gonna sound horrible." "But I'm surprised they lasted as long as they did." "Bright and Hannah are so different." "I could never see how it was gonna end, but at the same time," "I could never see how it would last." "I know, but I still had hope." "I just want to believe that people can work out if they really want to, you know?" "It always seems like there's so many people that you could work out with." "But in reality, it's almost impossible to find somebody that you connect with on all levels, not just one level." "Yeah, it is." "I should, uh, get to work." "Yeah, don't be late." "See you." "You want to try Cassie again?" "No, I already left her three messages." "I'm sorry, Harper." "I'm gonna go see if the car's outside." "Cassie..." "I thought you should at least have a picture of your granddaughter." "Thank you." "And here's a, um... invitation to her birthday party." "Dave wanted me to give you that." "Dave, huh?" "I'd really like it if you could come." "And you, too, Edna." "I like that you speak your mind." "You got fire in your belly, lady." "Coming from you, I'll take that as a compliment." "Thank you, Cassie... for the invite and for coming down." "Okay, I'll, um... see you then." "Reid, hey." "Hey, Dr. Hartman." "You want to start tomorrow?" "I got a late afternoon." "You can shadow me." "You know, um, I don't think I'm gonna be needing that internship anymore." "But thanks." "Is everything okay?" "No." "Not really." "Rose, how much longer do you intend to give me the silent treatment?" "You can't keep sleeping in the guest room for the rest of our lives." "Actually, I can." "I don't know what else to say, Rose." "I'm sorry." "What were you thinking, Harold?" "What could possibly have been going through your mind?" "I wasn't thinking, Rose." "I was acting purely out of emotion." "The moment I saw that question on the application," "I knew we were just fooling ourselves, that we would never have even been considered, let alone have gotten as far as we did." "You don't know that." "I do, Rose." "I do know that... and so do you." "Then what was the point of getting us all this way... of leading us down this path if you were so certain of the outcome?" "Because I wanted it as much as you did." "I wanted to think it was possible." "I didn't want to hear no." "Maybe we wouldn't have." "Sweetheart, it takes five years to be truly out of the woods." "You're not even one year into your remission." "We have a follow-up appointment and another scan to take less than three weeks " "Don't you think I know that?" "It's just not fair." "I'm strong." "I'm healthy." "I know I could take care of this child." "He would be so happy with us." "I know, Rose." "The only thing I think about more than that baby is all those damn appointments." "I have every one of them written down in my book." "It won't be till those five years pass that I'll feel like this is really behind us." "It just doesn't end, does it?" "Hey." "Hey!" "Almost ready." "Just need to decide on the gatorade." "What color do you like?" "Uh..." "Hannah " "I know." "I couldn't decide." "There are too many flavors." "Even the extreme ones, whatever that means." "Hannah... there's something I have to tell you." "Okay." "Uh... a couple weeks ago, when we were arguing and you didn't call me back, uh, something happened." "What happened?" "I messed up." "And I didn't mean to do it, and if I could take it back, oh, god, I would in a second." "Hang on." "Um, wait." "What are you saying?" "I mean, you didn't..." "Did you cheat on me?" "I'm sorry." "And, you know, it was so stupid." "My god." "This was a mistake, and it's not " "Stop." "I don't want to hear it." "I don't want to know." "It was the stupidest thing I've ever done in my life." " I don't want to know." " She means nothing to me." "No, no, no, no!" "Just stop!" "I need you to go." "You have to go now." "Hannah..." "Please."