:03:01
Thank you.
:03:05
Morning, Mr. Fisher.
:03:08
Doc!
:03:10
Hiya, Sally.
:03:11
Hi. Welcome home.
I'm glad you're back.
:03:14
How's Mickey and the baby?
:03:15
Fine, but everybody else
in Santa Mira needs a doctor.
:03:19
You've got an office
full of patients.
:03:20
Oh, no.
On my first day back?
:03:22
Some of them have
been waiting for two weeks.
:03:24
Why didn't you send them
to Pursey or Carmichael?
:03:26
Most of 'em wouldn't go.
They want to see you.
:03:30
Oh?
:03:38
What's the matter with them?
:03:39
They wouldn't say.
:03:41
Usually people can't talk enough
about what's ailing them.
:03:44
For instance,
Wally Eberhard was in twice...
:03:47
and called three times,
but he wouldn't say about what.
:03:50
That's funny.
:03:51
Nobody would talk--
from Becky Driscoll...
:03:52
down to that fat
traffic cop Sam Janzek.
:03:55
Becky Driscoll?
I thought she was in England.
:03:59
She got back a few days ago,
and she wanted to see you.
:04:03
Are you still interested?
:04:05
My interest in married women
is strictly professional...
:04:08
or yours would have been
a lost cause long ago.
:04:11
-How was the convention?
-Wonderful.
:04:14
They wept with envy
when I read my paper.
:04:19
Come back here!
:04:20
Jimmy!
:04:23
What's the matter,
Mrs. Grimaldi?
:04:26
It's nothing. He just don't
want to go to school.
:04:30
If I were you, I'd have
a talk with his teacher.
:04:34
I will when I get time.
:04:36
What's the matter?
Has Joe been sick?
:04:38
No.
We gave the stand up.
:04:40
-Too much work.
-Oh.
:04:42
The boy's
panic should have told me...
:04:44
it was more than school
he was afraid of...
:04:46
and that littered,
closed-up vegetable stand...
:04:48
should have
told me something, too.
:04:50
When I last saw it,
less than a month ago...
:04:52
it was the cleanest
and busiest stand on the road.
:04:54
That's strange.
:04:56
She was in to see you, too--
last Friday.
:04:59
I tried to get her to see
Doc Pursey, but she wouldn't.