Alyssa said:
When the episode finished I had one word: "Beautiful."
I thought it was just beautiful and lyrical, and I loved feeling the pain of everyone and the strength and the masterful way that they were a family.
When Grissom started to lose hope, Catherine let him know it would be ok. When Nick started to fall apart, he remembered Sara, and how hard they fought to find him, and how hard he fought to find that little girl in Gum Drops, and he knows he can't stop fighting now for Sara.
Sara proved she's strong. She's not one to be messed with, and she tried her best to get away, to get free, to find help. Sure, leaving the site of the car might not have been the best idea, but she was delerious and fighting for her life. She wanted to live.
I loved getting to go through her journey with her. I hadn't expected to see her that much this episode, but it was a visual and emotional treat. She was breaking and hurting, and yet she never stopped fighting.
I love that Grissom wasn't the one to find her. I know I'm a GSR shipper, and I'm supposed to want that running through the fields into each other's arms stuff, but that's not my MO. I love that Nick was there with Sophia, and that he immediately started pouring water all over her.
I love how Gil was smart enough to stay away and let the medics work, but when it came to separate from Sara so she could go to the hospital, he wasn't having it. He climbed in there, and reached for her hand, and when she opened her eyes, there he was. I love how he smiled at her. I LOVE there wasn't a kiss. I LOVE that there wasn't a hug. I LOVE that no words were spoken. It was beautiful.
I just loved this. I know others disagree, but I love lyrical, slow-moving things, sometimes, and this just captured and captivated me.
It made me love CSI even more, and love these characters, and helped me realize just what an amazing family they are.
I mean, processing a car is usually Warrick and Sara's thing... But Gil was there, and Warrick kept trying to offer answers, to offer something to cling to, something tangible. They were just a great family. I loved it.