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00:00Adrian! Adrian Pitts! The great Martin Ellingham, who, as you all know, abused myself and others
00:07at St Mary's, and taught us a thing or two about medicine.
00:10Panic attacks. I sometimes have small panic attacks.
00:14What brings them on? Blood. The smell of that. Sometimes just the
00:18inside of it. Your secret's safe with me.
01:19Excuse me, do you mind? Right breast.
01:28What? You have that looked at? You shouldn't be sunbathing.
01:32Get lost, you tosser. That could be a melanoma.
01:36Martin! That was, um, unfortunate.
01:44Well, maybe you should introduce yourself before you try...
01:49Don't worry, I'll go and explain. I don't need to be apologised for.
02:08What do you think you're doing? You can't park here, this is private property.
02:12It's a doctor's surgery, move it! It's OK, Chief, it's me.
02:17Adrian Pitts? What do you want?
02:20Showing Tanya the North Coast. Thought we'd stop off in Port Wem for some lunch.
02:24Is it me, or is there absolutely nothing to eat here? Hilarious place, nothing worth stopping for, and you still can't park.
02:30We were just saying it shouldn't be called Port Wem, it should be called Port Why.
02:35It's a sense of passing, mate. Any chance of a quick word?
02:39All right.
02:47I love it.
02:49Have you got, like, some buxom maid who brings you scones at four o'clock?
02:53What do you want, Adrian?
02:55A path and direction to the nearest town with a half-decent restaurant.
02:58In my experience with totties, they say they don't want to eat,
03:01but unless you keep their sugar up, they don't put up.
03:05Anyway, I was wondering if I could ask you a small favour.
03:08I was hoping you could put in a word with Chris Parsons for me.
03:11Oh?
03:12Well, Faulkner's moving on.
03:14You're ready to step up, are you?
03:16Yeah, I mean, the problem is there's a little bit of resistance from Chris Parsons,
03:19and while I know you two are mates, I thought maybe you could give him a call, eh, Chief?
03:22I've spoken to Chris, he called me.
03:24Oh?
03:26He thinks you're an arse.
03:29I think you're an arse, too.
03:31Enjoy your weekend.
03:41Arse.
03:44Let's get out of this place.
03:53Come on, 5G, the quicker we get changed, the longer we can have outside.
03:57Miss?
03:58I have a note.
03:59OK, Peter, go and sit in the library.
04:01Yes.
04:02Hang on, let's see the note.
04:04I don't know why we do PE.
04:06It's not education, it's running about.
04:09Well, Peter, why do we do anything?
04:11I hate sport and I'm not learning anything.
04:14Well, sometimes you just have to get the heartbeat in, my friend.
04:17It's not a reason.
04:18Saying you have to do something doesn't explain why you have to do it.
04:21Enough, Peter.
04:22It's still not a reason.
04:25Drops three times a day should clear up.
04:28If not, come back and see me.
04:31Try and stay out of the water.
04:33I can't do that, Doc.
04:34Big blue surf competition coming up.
04:36Whatever.
04:37I don't need a blood test, then.
04:39You have an ear infection, Neville.
04:41You'd have to do a blood test, wouldn't you?
04:44There's no nurse here, is there?
04:47No, there's no nurse.
04:50I should have had this done years ago.
04:53You always think it might be cancer.
04:56It's just a common mould. It's nothing to worry about.
04:59Is this thing going to hurt?
05:01Not unless I try really hard.
05:03Will it bleed?
05:06I'm another one who's not keen on the old red stuff.
05:13I'm not big on blood.
05:20Mind, I don't have a thing about it like you do.
05:24That's right, isn't it, Doc?
05:26Hold still, please.
05:29I can feel that.
05:32I can feel that!
05:35Really?
05:38Can we not play a team game?
05:40I hate team games.
05:42And that's exactly why you should play them.
05:44You're doing it again.
05:46Do you think that's logical?
05:48Do you think I'm going to argue with you?
05:51Look, team game basically means everyone else teams up against me.
05:56I don't fit in.
05:58Yes, you do, and I'm going to make sure of it,
06:00cos you're my special project, young man.
06:03Is that cos you're giving up with Doc Martin?
06:05I'll be giving up with you in a minute.
06:07Good. Then can I go to the library?
06:10Go, Ellie! Go, Ellie!
06:13Go, Ellie! Go, Ellie!
06:16Go, Ellie! Go, Ellie!
06:19Zac, you fell in the sea, you're it.
06:24WHISTLE BLOWS
06:26Go, Ellie! Go, Ellie!
06:29Come on, come on!
06:31Go, Ellie! Go, Ellie!
06:34Come on, come on!
06:36Go, Ellie! Go, Ellie!
06:39Pizza! Pizza! Pizza! Pizza!
06:43Peter! Peter! Peter! Peter!
06:59Peter!
07:02Peter!
07:03Peter, are you okay?
07:05Peter...
07:06Peter...
07:07Are you okay?
07:09Peter?
07:11Later?
07:13Now can I go to the library?
07:27May I have any chance of making me a cup of tea?
07:30Make it yourself. I'm not the tea girl.
07:32As you can see, I have patients waiting.
07:35Well, best go faster, then.
07:37White, no sugar.
07:40Mrs Hayter?
07:47Portwine Surgery.
07:51Yeah.
07:54Yeah. Hold on.
07:56Doc! Emergency!
07:59Burr largest rooms left down the pub!
08:01What's happened?
08:11I slipped with a drill.
08:12Doc?
08:14Yeah, it was quite deep.
08:17A lot of blood.
08:18Thought we were gonna lose him.
08:19You got me real good, Doc.
08:21My life flashed before my eyes.
08:26Right, um, first things first.
08:28Let's, uh, clean him up.
08:29Al, could you find some water to wash off the, uh...
08:34What, the blood?
08:35Yeah.
08:36You all right, Doc?
08:37Yeah, I just, um, need the, uh...
08:40The blood?
08:43Here we are.
08:52Doc, are you all right?
08:59What?
09:16Very funny.
09:17Yeah.
09:18Very clever.
09:26Not stopping for a pint, then?
09:29Did you see his face?
09:35Move it!
09:40I tell you, I didn't know whether he was gonna try and patch me up
09:43or fight into me arms.
09:45You should be so lucky, Burr.
09:47Well, Burr always did like them tall and blonde.
09:59Please, miss.
10:01Don't tell Mum.
10:03I have to, I'm afraid.
10:06Please, miss.
10:07She'll freak out.
10:11I'm really sorry.
10:13I told you.
10:16Peter, if you take part in things,
10:20then eventually you'll be part of things.
10:23So let them tease you and just see the funny side.
10:26Then people will think,
10:27oh, he's all right, he's one of us.
10:32Easier said than done, eh?
10:34Bad mood.
10:40He's fine, but I thought you should check him over
10:42in case he had a cracked rib or whatever,
10:44you know, just to be on the safe side.
10:46Right, he's fine, but best to be on the safe side,
10:48but a woman sunbathing with a melanoma is best to ignore.
10:50Strange advice.
10:51That's not fair, that is not what I said.
10:53Where does it hurt?
10:54It's all right.
10:57When you're the doctor, you can make that judgment.
10:59Where does it hurt?
11:00It doesn't.
11:01Right, I'll just leave you to it.
11:04Where did you fall?
11:06Landed on my front.
11:09Just bruising.
11:11Definitely nothing broken.
11:17Told you.
11:18I happen to know of a cracked rib you get.
11:21Shush, breathe in.
11:24Let out.
11:27I have done some reading.
11:29Have you done a medical degree?
11:31No.
11:32Well, shut up then.
11:33Sorry, can I have a word?
11:38What do you think you're doing?
11:40He's nine years old.
11:42All right, take him to the hospital.
11:44What?
11:45Obviously, nine-year-olds and nursery teachers
11:46know better than I do.
11:47Take him to the hospital and get him checked over there.
11:51Listen, that has absolutely nothing to do with you.
11:55I think that was my fault.
11:58Mum said not to show people that you're clever.
12:01Because if they're not clever, they don't like it.
12:06The dog is clever and I thought he'd like it.
12:19Sorry, bad day.
12:21Martin, if you are going to come to lunch,
12:23at least come at lunchtime.
12:24It is completely ruined.
12:25Well, unfortunately, our lunch engagement
12:27didn't quite fit in with the village's plans
12:29to make me an object of ridicule.
12:30And who have you upset now?
12:31I haven't upset anybody.
12:32I was just trying to do my job,
12:33but somebody has been spreading malicious, unfounded...
12:37Ben.
12:38Roger, bloody chip on the shoulder, Ben.
12:41Excuse me.
12:42Martin?
12:44Martin!
12:50If there's any consolation,
12:51saying the right thing at the right time to the right person,
12:54no-one finds that easy.
12:57Do you love him?
13:00No.
13:01Who?
13:04Mind your own business.
13:16Good luck, Martin, sir.
13:18When I took you into my confidence,
13:20I didn't expect a few weeks later
13:22to find the entire village entertaining itself at my expense.
13:25What?
13:26The doc has a thing about blood.
13:28Aside from being a misrepresentation,
13:30it hardly inspires confidence.
13:32That was between you and me.
13:35What do you mean?
13:37You didn't tell anyone?
13:39Frankly, I resent the accusation.
13:43It's Dr Ellingham.
13:45It's Dr Ellingham.
13:48I prefer being called Dr Ellingham.
13:57You OK, Peter?
13:59All right.
14:15Oh.
14:16Feeling better, are you?
14:18Roger suitably chastised?
14:20No.
14:21Why not?
14:23Seems it wasn't him, after all.
14:25I see.
14:27Martin, exactly what is this malicious gossip?
14:30Haven't you heard?
14:31No.
14:32I find that hard to believe.
14:33I'm surprised it hasn't been broadcast on radio Portwen.
14:36Well, strange as it seems,
14:37you are not the sole topic of conversation in Portwen.
14:41But what is it?
14:43It's nothing.
14:44This nothing is completely unfounded, is it?
14:48I put the meat in some sandwiches.
14:50I couldn't wait any longer.
14:54Right.
14:57I, um...
14:58Please, Marty, don't apologise.
15:00It would give either one or both of us heart failure.
15:04Yeah.
15:14Mrs Cronk?
15:15I'm his teacher.
15:16Well, you can tell Peter's parents there's no bones broken.
15:19It's just a bit of bruising, what we call...
15:21Intercostal strain.
15:22Yes. You've taught him well.
15:23My family.
15:24Well, Peter, you must take it easy, OK?
15:28Rest of the week off school, maybe.
15:30He should be fine.
15:31If you're worried about him at all, bring him back and we'll see him again.
15:34OK.
15:35Bye-bye.
15:36Bye.
15:37Miss Green?
15:38Come on, then.
15:44Radio port WEN 106.1 FM.
15:47And it's that time of the month, if you'll pardon the connotation,
15:50that we turn our thoughts to what's ever on your mind.
15:54Got something to say?
15:56Give me a call. Port WEN 6178.
16:00Go ahead, caller. You're live with Caroline.
16:02Hello, Caroline. This is Lily.
16:04It's about Doc Martin.
16:06Do you think it's true what they're saying,
16:08that the poor man's scared of blood?
16:10What?
16:11No, Lily, this isn't a forum for gossip.
16:13But I heard that Bert Large would have bled to death
16:16because the dog wouldn't come near him.
16:18Oh, come on!
16:19Well, that's what they're saying.
16:21Bert had an accident and the dog went to pieces.
16:23Well, I don't want to see a doctor who's scared of blood.
16:26I reckon we should have a proper doctor in Port WEN.
16:29Well, I couldn't possibly comment.
16:32What's that?
16:35They're saying Doc Martin's funny about blood.
16:38What? Funny how?
16:40Lucy Holmes says that...
16:43..you can't bear sight of it.
16:45It's the smell. I'm not sure.
16:47But he used to be a surgeon.
16:50That's what worries me, Caroline. I don't want to be going to Truro.
16:53No, that's a very good point, Lily. Thank you very much indeed.
16:56Let's take another call. You're through to Caroline.
16:59I'm Morwenna and I specialise in homeopathic medicine.
17:03I bet you don't come across much of the red stuff in your line of work.
17:06I just want to suggest that Doc Martin might benefit
17:10from Thuja Occidentalis.
17:12Thuja?
17:13Thuja Occidentalis.
17:15What does that do, Morwenna?
17:17It's good for haemophobia, the fear of blood.
17:20Oh, so there's a technical term, is there? Haemophobia.
17:23Yes, haemophobia.
17:25It's not uncommon, actually. Quite a few people get it.
17:28But not too many doctors, I hope.
17:30No, he couldn't really be in a worse profession, could he?
17:33Unless he was a butcher.
17:35LAUGHTER
17:40I'll bet you caused a storm there, mate.
17:42Oh, that was investigative journalism.
17:45I was uncovering the truth of the greater good.
17:47Dad, what are you talking about?
17:49Well, the way I see it is this.
17:51If a plumber, like me or Al, were afraid of water,
17:54then that is something that the great Cornish public
17:56has a right to know about.
17:58Besides, old Doc Martin, he'll be over it by now.
18:01He'll just go with the flow. You'll see the footage.
18:04Next caller.
18:06Your line was...
18:07This is Dr Martin-Ellingham.
18:08I just wanted to get a few things crystal clear for you
18:11and your puerile listeners.
18:13I admit to having certain difficulties, but they have not,
18:16and they never will impair my function as a doctor.
18:20And for the record, a certain village plumber's accident
18:23was in fact a prank with some ketchup,
18:25which by the way kept me from attending to patients in my surgery.
18:29And as for so-called homeopathic remedies,
18:31well, I suggest if there's one for chronic infantilism,
18:35then your caller, and indeed the entire village,
18:38should embark on a course immediately.
18:42Right, that was Dr Ellingham calling in with...
19:02DOOR OPENS
19:12Miss Guthman, what's happened?
19:14Didn't Mrs Curran get in touch with you?
19:16No. What's happened? Miss, it's OK.
19:18Mum, you've got customers.
19:20What's he done now?
19:22Peter had an accident during P.E.
19:24We took him to the hospital and he's fine.
19:27Mum, let's go.
19:29Can I get some water, please?
19:31She panics sometimes. Please, water.
19:36Oh, what have you done?
19:41Hello, my name's Martin Ellingham.
19:44I thought you were bleeding.
19:46Oh, he's going to puke.
19:48He needs a doctor.
19:51Potter!
19:59Are you sure he's all right? He's fine.
20:01He's amazing. He diagnosed himself.
20:03Intercostal sprain.
20:05I'm all right, love.
20:07Thank God. Thank you.
20:20I took Peter to the hospital.
20:22He's fine. Home-eating steak.
20:26I heard the thing on the radio.
20:30My private concerns seem to provide this village
20:33with an endless source of amusement.
20:35Martin, I don't think...
20:37Haven't you people anything better to do with your time than gossip?
20:40You people?
20:42Forgive me, but I think a doctor being afraid of blood is worthy of discussion.
20:45Maybe not on the radio. Maybe that was a bit harsh.
20:48I have a minor blood issue.
20:52I do not need your sympathy. Thank you.
20:55I'm a lay member of the panel which interviewed you,
20:57and I don't recall your minor blood issue being mentioned.
21:00Now, that amounts to negligence at best.
21:03I didn't mean that.
21:05For the record, I wrote in advance to the head of the PCT,
21:08explaining in full.
21:10I said I didn't mean it. Well, what did you mean?
21:12I don't know.
21:14I don't know why every conversation we have is so combative.
21:18Do you?
21:20Martin?
21:23Now, when I speak, it just makes things worse.
21:26That is not an answer. That is just so childish.
21:30Well, I think you've just proved my point.
21:32Yeah, and Peter would say that too.
21:34You know something? Both of you, you deliberately stand outside the crowd
21:38and then you wonder why you feel isolated.
21:40And you know what?
21:42Apart from anything else, that is so selfish.
21:52I love you.
22:22HE PANTS
22:29PHONE RINGS
22:33Hello? Hello?
22:39Get lost.
22:48Mrs Croke?
22:52Oh, my...
23:06PHONE BEEPS
23:09PHONE BEEPS
23:20Martin?
23:22Martin?
23:25I need you, Martin.
23:29Martin, please.
23:33Oh, Louisa.
23:38Martin.
23:48Oh, go! Get off!
23:51Martin! Martin!
23:54If you get this message, meet me at the Cross. Something's wrong.
23:58I'm going over now.
24:09KNOCK AT DOOR Mrs Croke?
24:13Mrs Croke?
24:29It's all right.
24:32SHE PANTS
24:37Mrs Croke? Mrs Croke?
24:39Just... Just, erm... Just breathe out. Breathe out for me.
24:45Where's Peter?
24:49Is he upstairs?
24:51He's upstairs?
24:53I'm going to go and take a look at him, OK?
24:55And then I'll be right back.
24:58I'm going to make you more comfortable.
25:05It's going to be all right. It's going to be all right.
25:11Peter! It's Miss Glasson, Peter!
25:19Peter, can you hear me?
25:21Peter, it's Miss Glasson.
25:24Can you tell me what's wrong?
25:26Can you tell me what's wrong, Peter?
25:29Peter! Peter!
25:38Erm, ambulance.
25:42Hello?
25:46What's happened?
25:48Peter!
25:50What? Mrs Croke's having a panic attack. She's having a panic attack.
25:53She's had them before.
25:55Peter's very ill upstairs. I've just called for an ambulance.
25:58Find a paper bag and have her breathe in and out of it.
26:01Breathe in and out of the bag and help her breathe in.
26:04On the left!
26:08Peter, it's Dr Elliott.
26:10How are you feeling?
26:23Are you all right?
26:46Mrs Croke, does Peter have neck pain?
26:49I should have called you sooner.
26:52Is he having pain there? There's a towel underneath it.
26:55He said it was stiff.
26:57On the left-hand side.
26:59What does that mean? Where's that ambulance?
27:01I've only just called. It's probably still in Truro.
27:03That's not good enough. Call Mark Milo. Tell him we need him down here right away.
27:07This is Dr Ellingham, Portwen. I need you to scramble the air ambulance.
27:10Mark, it's Louisa. I'm in the crash with Martin.
27:13A nine-year-old male with a suspected ruptured spleen.
27:15He's probably been leaking since lunchtime,
27:17so you need to alert the Chief of Surgical Team.
27:19That speed's very much of the essence.
27:21Louisa, where can a helicopter land?
27:23At the harbour. They've landed there before.
27:25At the harbour. Apparently they've landed there before.
27:27Yeah. Quickly, please.
27:34Peter?
27:37We're going to take you to hospital.
27:40Good.
27:47Where is he? Upstairs.
27:49Peter, listen.
27:52At school, when I was cross...
27:55OK, in hand. I've got the bag.
28:10Anything I can do, Doc?
28:12Yeah. Can you get Mrs Cronk and follow us down to the harbour?
28:14Come with my lover. You come over here with me.
28:16I've got my car. Just don't worry.
28:18Louisa, why don't you get in first? I'll run him to you.
28:22OK.
28:24Yep.
28:26Come on.
28:46Where's the bloody helicopter?
28:51Mark, why don't you see if you can raise them on the radio?
28:56Charlie is marked here.
28:58Mrs Cronk, I don't imagine you want to fly with us,
29:00so why don't you follow on in the car with Mr Thornton
29:02and meet us at the hospital?
29:06Look, I don't think you should come with me
29:08with all that strange breathing.
29:10I'm going with Mr Thornton. Just do it.
29:12I'll see you at the hospital, OK?
29:14Mum will see you soon, eh?
29:17Promise.
29:19Promise you'll stay with him.
29:21Yeah, of course.
29:23You've got your Miss Glasson with you, Petey.
29:26You've got your favourite Miss Gee.
29:28Come on.
29:30Come on.
29:37His pulse is racing.
29:54I asked for a helicopter.
29:56Are you the GP?
29:58Where is it?
30:00It was stuck at Delaval.
30:02It's a mechanical fault, no engineer on hand.
30:04What?
30:06That's what we've got.
30:08Abdominal trauma?
30:10Yes, four.
30:12All right, I'll take it.
30:14Careful.
30:16What are you doing?
30:24Thanks.
30:27We'll take it from here.
30:29I'm going with you.
30:31So am I.
30:53I was wrong.
30:55It's Gustaf's brain.
30:57Oh, I see.
30:59Let's get you to hospital.
31:01You might be right.
31:03No.
31:05You tell the truth.
31:07Most adults.
31:09You tell the truth.
31:11OK, Peter.
31:13I think when you fell in the gym,
31:15you may have hurt one of your important organs.
31:17I don't think so.
31:19I don't think so.
31:21I think when you fell in the gym,
31:23you may have hurt one of your important organs.
31:25You have some shoulder-tip pain on your left-hand side,
31:27so I suspect that it's the spleen.
31:29You can live without your spleen, can't you?
31:31Yes, you can.
31:33But you may be bleeding inside,
31:35so that's why we're getting you to the hospital.
31:39Am I going to be OK?
31:41If I have anything to do with it, yes.
31:45And, Peter,
31:47I'm sorry if I was rude earlier.
31:49I was having a bad day.
31:51You've got to let them tease you.
31:53Sorry?
31:55You've got to let them tease you.
31:59After a while,
32:01they say,
32:03oh, yes,
32:05he's one of us.
32:15How come you got a thing about blood?
32:17It's a minor anxiety disorder
32:19resulting from overexposure
32:21to our high-pressure environment.
32:23Surgery.
32:27I was operating on a woman one day.
32:29Simple procedure.
32:31I went to see her in the ward beforehand
32:33and her family were there,
32:35her husband and her sister and her son.
32:37They were clinging to her.
32:39Wouldn't let go.
32:41And the next time I saw her,
32:43she was prepped and laid out in front of me
32:45on the operating table.
32:47And I couldn't do it.
32:49I haven't been able to operate since, actually.
32:51Which is a shame,
32:53because it's the only thing I was ever any good at.
32:55Martin.
32:57You've got to let them tease you.
33:01You've got to let them tease you.
33:11How long did we get there?
33:1325 minutes, Sam.
33:15I think he's bleeding internally.
33:17Might be just a crack rib.
33:19No, he hasn't got a crack rib.
33:21Do something, Martin.
33:23Let's let the A&E team deal with it.
33:25No, Martin.
33:27Look, love, as I always say,
33:29the little end-stage, drop like flies,
33:31bounce back like balloons.
33:33He'll be right.
33:35His blood pressure's gone right off.
33:37He's bleeding out.
33:39Get a line.
33:41No hemocell?
33:43I'll let you get us there.
33:45Can you get a move on, please?
33:47We've got to get some fluid in him.
33:49Now.
33:53Oh, no, I can't find a vein.
33:55You can't find a vein.
33:59Oh, you missed her.
34:11All right.
34:17All right.
34:19Now, Louisa,
34:21I need you to squeeze this bottle as hard as you can,
34:23and when you get to the bottom, twist it all out.
34:41It's finished.
34:43Blood pressure?
34:45Not recordable.
34:47Oh, God.
34:49Have you got a blade?
34:51Yeah.
34:53I've got no incentive, though.
34:55He's not feeling anything where he is, is he?
34:57I need some gloves.
34:59Some disinfectant.
35:01Do you carry a Spencer-Wells, Fawcett?
35:03Yeah.
35:05OK.
35:07Prep his upper left quadrant, please.
35:09All right.
35:25OK.
35:27Let's go.
35:33Um...
35:35I may vomit.
35:37Oh, my...
35:41OK.
35:55Yeah.
35:57That's his spleen.
35:59Spencer-Wells.
36:03If I can just clamp
36:05his plenic artery in there,
36:07it might buy us a little...
36:11God, it's broken.
36:13You got another? No?
36:15Martin!
36:17Oh, I'll just have to...
36:19hold it by hand till we get there.
36:23OK.
36:27All right.
36:29No BP?
36:31Er, coming back a bit.
36:33Oh, that's as much as we can do.
36:35Um...
36:37Radio ahead. Tell him what we know.
36:39And ask him how I'm functioning!
36:41Spencer-Wells, Fawcett, standing by.
36:59OK, I'm through here.
37:03OK.
37:09OK.
37:11Yeah. Oh.
37:13Oh, sorry.
37:15Right, let's go and wait.
37:27I'm going to the loo.
37:29Shall I get some coffee?
37:31Right.
37:35You're sitting on my coat.
37:37Mm.
37:39Sorry.
37:41Mr and Mrs Cronk? I'm Mrs Cronk.
37:43What's wrong? How's the boy?
37:45The surgeon's on his way down to see you.
37:47Would you like to follow me? Yes.
37:55Mrs Cronk?
38:01I heard the big chief was here.
38:03How is he? Actually, no, tell his mother first.
38:05Her name's Joy.
38:07Yes.
38:09Don't worry, we do know the drill.
38:13You know him?
38:15Former pupil.
38:27Oh, my God, Martin!
38:31Oh, my God.
38:45Nurse, some water for Mrs Cronk, please.
38:47And some oxygen.
38:59Don't you miss that?
39:01The gratitude gets me every time.
39:03So what?
39:05Peter's all right?
39:07Minus a spleen, but he'll live.
39:09Oh, thank God.
39:11You don't need me to tell you you saved him on the way in.
39:13Remarkable, given your handicap.
39:15I suppose one never really loses the basics.
39:19A tiny bit of pancreatic leak, that's all.
39:21Secondary spleen?
39:23There was, actually, and yes, sir, I was careful to leave it.
39:25And by the way,
39:27we did find somewhere to eat down your way.
39:29Pub. Perfectly decent food.
39:31Had a pint with some of the locals.
39:33Like to gossip, don't they?
39:35Hope I didn't drop you in it.
39:37Mr Pitts? Excuse me.
39:45What was that about?
39:47What was?
39:49Spread the word about my club thing.
40:03You two get back.
40:05Are you sure?
40:09Tell him I'll come and see him after school.
40:17Thank you both.
40:41Actually, can you give me one minute?
40:43Wait.
40:45I said, no, madam, I think you misheard me.
40:47I said cranial shunt.
40:51I just wanted to say thank you for looking after Peter.
40:53It's nothing.
40:55Well, maybe to you.
40:57Listen, did you get into a truro match?
40:59If I did,
41:01you would be the last person I'd want to see.
41:03Pardon?
41:05If you ever badmouth Martin Ellingham,
41:07who, by the way, is ten times the man you are,
41:09I'm going to kill you.
41:11who, by the way, is ten times the man you will ever be.
41:13I was just surprised that people didn't already know
41:15that their doctor...
41:17If you ever do that again,
41:19I promise you that I will be the last person
41:21that you will want to see in Portwen,
41:23in truro, or anywhere.
41:25Do we understand each other?
41:27Sure.
41:41Everything all right?
41:43Fine.
42:11How are you feeling?
42:13Okay.
42:15You did a very special thing today.
42:21What did Peter mean
42:23when he said let them tease you?
42:25It's the advice I gave him
42:27which pretty much resulted in him rupturing his spleen.
42:31Maybe the truth is
42:33that people like Peter,
42:35they're never going to quite fit in.
42:37They're never going to quite fit in.
42:39They're never going to quite be ordinary.
42:41And maybe that's not such a bad thing.
42:43And maybe that's not such a bad thing.
42:47And maybe that's why we love the Peters of this world.
42:49And maybe that's why we...
42:51All right, bye.
42:53All right, bye.
43:09All right, bye.
43:39Bye.
44:09What?
44:11Nothing.
44:13No, say it.
44:17I'm assuming
44:19you have a regular
44:21dental hygiene routine.
44:23Pardon?
44:25Are you being serious?
44:27Well, no, it's just...
44:29Well, obviously not in the last few hours,
44:31but thank you very much, yes, I have.
44:33Oh, I see.
44:35Well, obviously not in the last few hours,
44:37but thank you very much, yes, I have.
44:39Of course.
44:41That would suggest rhinocytus
44:43or gastroesophageal reflux.
44:45Are you saying I've got bad breath?
44:47Are you saying I've got bad breath?
44:49I just think it would be wise to rule out
44:51any infections of the aerodigestive tract.
44:55Obviously, a dietary explanation
44:57would be the happiest outcome.
45:07Louisa?
45:37Louisa?