Essentially he is speaking encouraging words to himself. As Rush helps to deliver a baby to a young teenager whose parents want her to give the baby up for adoption against her wishes, Rush finds himself speaking words of wisdom to the girl, saying that if she wants to raise a baby, she has to grow up and be the woman her parents are proud of. While the cases of the week in episode 9 are pretty standard but also help Rush understand the man he wants to and needs to be with Eve.
Once he also learns about Sarah’s desire to have children through IVF, and also choosing an anonymous sperm donor based on baby pictures of the donors, Will unashamedly and unequivocally throws his name in the ring, declaring himself to be a competent father, even going so far to unofficially ask for a job at his old work in the hospital. When we last met Rush (Tom Ellis), he was comforting Sarah (Odette Annable) after knowing of her ovarian cancer. The best episodes are the ones that integrate the A plots with the B and C plots (the episodes that bring Rush’s patients and ailments and makes them related to or teaching him something about his relationships with Sarah, Alex, Eve etc), and these last two episodes are no different. Many of the things that were certain now aren’t, and I have to say, the show surprised me in the end in a very good way, so much so that I would be disappointed if the show was cancelled, though a few episodes ago I probably wouldn’t have cared. USA Network’s Rush ended its first season today (although I was quite sure that there were 12 episodes this season, not ten), and it ends the season quite dramatically. At the end of the freshman run of a show struggling for ratings, and a show that might not be renewed. Starring: Tom Ellis, Larenz Tate, Sarah Habel, Rick Gonzalez, Erica Cerra, Harry Hamlin, Rachel Nichols, Odette Annable Episode Air Date: September 11 th, 18 th 2014