Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
his desk, he shuffled several file folders, pulled one free from the
others and opened it, From the other side of the desk Celia could see
that it contained financial statements.
"This hasn't been circulated yet, but the board of directors will see it
soon." Sam put his finger on a figure. "When you went over to Bray &
Commonwealth, revenues from that division were ten percent of all
Felding-Roth sales. This year the figure will be fifteen percent, with
profit up proportionately." Sam closed the folder and smiled. "Of course,
you were helped a little by a falloff in prescription drugs sales. Just
the same, it's a tremendous achievement, Celia. Congratulations!"
"Thank you." Celia was pleased. She had expected the figures to be
favorable, though not as outstanding as those Sam had just reported. She
considered briefly, then told him, "I think O-T-C will keep its momentum,
and Bill Ingram has become very good. Since, as you just said,
prescription sales are down, maybe I could help out there."
"You will," Sam said. "I promise it. Also, we may have something special
and interesting for you. But be patient for a few months more."
123
3
Andrew faced the hospital administrator grimly, They were in Leonard
Sweeting's office and both were standing. Tension hung in the air between
them.
It was a Friday, close to noon.
"Dr. Jordan," the St. Bede's administrator said formally-his voice taut,
his expression serious-"before you go any further, let me caution you to
be absolutely certain of what you are saying and to consider the
consequences which may follow."
"Goddammit!" Andrew, who was short-tempered from a sleepless night, was
ready to explode. "Do you think I haven't done that?"
"I imagined you had. I wanted to be sure." As usual, Sweeting's thick,
bushy eyebrows moved up and down rapidly as he spoke.
"All right-here it is again, Leonard, and this time I'm making it
official." Continuing, Andrew chose his words carefully, the sentences
wrenched reluctantly from his heart.
"My partner, Dr. Noah Townsend," Andrew said, "is up on the medical floor
at this moment where he is seeing patients. To my personal knowledge, Dr.
Townsend is under the influence of drugs, to which he is addicted. In my
opinion he is incompetent to practice medicine and may be endangering
patients' lives. Further, also to my personal knowledge, a patient died
needlessly in this hospital this week because of an error by Noah
Townsend when he was impaired by drugs."
"Jesus!" At the final sentence the administrator had paled. Now he
pleaded, "Andrew, can you at least leave that last bit out?"
"I can't and I won't! I also demand that you do something immediately."
Andrew added savagely, "Something you should have done four years ago
when we both knew what was happening, but you and others chose to keep
your mouths closed and your eyes averted."
Leonard Sweeting growled, "I have to do something. Legally,
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Andrew's mother, who had moved to Europe, was seldom heard from and,
despite invitations, had never been to visit. She had not seen her
grandchildren and apparently had no wish to. "When she hears from us, we
remind her that she's old," Andrew observed. "She'd prefer not to have that
happen, so I think we'll leave her alone."
Celia sensed the sadness behind Andrew's remark.
Andrew's long-estranged father had died; the news reached them, by merest
chance, several months after it happened.
As to younger family members, Lisa was now seven and in second grade at
school. She continued to exhibit a strong personality, took her schoolwork
seriously, and had a special pride in her growing vocabulary, though
sometimes straining it. Referring to an American history lesson, she told
Celia, "We learned about the American Constipation, Mommy," and on another
occasion when explaining a circle, "The outside is the encumbrance."
Bruce-now almost five-showed, in contrast, a gentleness and sensitivity,
partly offset by a droll sense of humor. Celia was prompted to observe once
to Andrew, "Brucie can be hurt easily. He'll need more protecting than
Lisa."
"Then he must do what I did," Andrew responded, "and marry a strong, good
woman." He said it tenderly and Celia went to him and hugged him.
Afterward she said, "I see a lot of you in Brucie."
Of course, the two of them bickered occasionally, and there had been a
serious quarrel or two during eight years of marriage, but no more than
wits normal between husbands and wives, nor did the minor wounds they
inflicted fail to heal quickly. Both knew they had a good marriage and did
all they could to protect and preserve it.
The children were with them when they watched, on TV, the rioting in Watts.
"My God!" Andrew breathed, as scene followed awful scene-of burning,
looting, destruction, brutality, injury and death, savage fighting between
embittered blacks and beleaguered police in the wretched, degrading,
segregated ghetto slum of Charcoal Alley. It was a living nightmare of
poverty and misery the world ignored, except at moments like this when
Watts obligingly provided drama for the TV networks, which it would
continue to do for five more dreadful days and nights. "My God!" Andrew
repeated. "Can you believe this is happening in our own country?"
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All of them were so riveted to the TV screen that not until near the end
did Celia observe Bruce who was shaking, quivering, sobbing silently, with
tears streaming down his face. She went to him at once and held him, urging
Andrew, "Switch it offl"
But Bruce called out, "No, Daddy! No!" and they continued watching until
the terrible scenes were done.
"They were hurting people, Mommy!" Bruce protested afterward.
Still comforting him, Celia answered, "Yes, Brucie, they were. It's sad and
it's wrong, but it sometimes happens." She hesitated, then added, "What
you're going to find out is that things like what you saw often happen."
Later, when the children were abed, Andrew said, "It was all depressing,
but you gave Brucie the right answer. Too many of us live in cocoons.
Sooner or later he has to learn there's another world outside."
"Yes," Celia said. She went on thoughtfully, "I've been wanting to talk to
you about cocoons. I think I've been in one myself."
A swift smile crossed her husband's face, then disappeared. He asked,
"Could it be an O-T-C cocoon?"
"Something like that. I know that some of what I've been doing involves
things you don't approve of, Andrew-like Healthotherm and System 500. You
haven't said a lot. Have you ininded very much?"
"Maybe a little." He hesitated, then went on. "I'm proud of you, Celia, and
what you do, and it's the reason I'll be glad when someday you go back to
the prescription medicines side of Felding-Roth, which we both know is a
whole lot more important. Meanwhile, though, there are things I've come to
terms with. One is, people will go on buying snake oil whether you or
others produce it, so it doesn't make a helluva difference who does. And
something else: If people didn't buy O-T-C potions and went to doctors
in~tead, we'd all be swamped-we couldn't cope."
"Aren't you rationalizing?" Celia asked doubtfully. "Just because it's me?"
"If I am, why not? You're my wife, and I love you."
"That goes both ways." She leaned over to kiss him. "Well, you can stop
rationalizing, darling, because I've decided that O-T-C and I have been
together long enough. Tomorrow I intend to ask for a change."
"If it's what you really want, I hope you get it."
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after what you've told me, I have no choice. But as to what's past, I know
nothing about it."
"You're lying," Andrew said, "and both of us know it. But I'll let that
go because at the time I was as bad, and as gutless as you. What I'm
concerned about is now."
The administrator sighed. He said, half to himself, "I guess this had to
break open sometime." Then, moving to his desk, he picked up a telephone.
A secretary's voice rattled in the instrument and Sweeting instructed,
"Get me the chairman of the board downtown. Whatever he's doing, tell his
people to break into it. This is urgent. When you've done that, you and
anyone else out there get on phones and summon a meeting of the medical
executive committee. The meeting will be held immediately in the
boardroom." Sweeting glanced at a clock. "Most heads of services should
be in the hospital now."
As the administrator put down the phone he grimaced wearily, then his
manner softened. "This is a bad day, Andrew. For all of us, and for the
hospital. But I know you've done what you felt you had to."
Andrew nodded dully. "What happens next?"
"The executive committee will meet in a few minutes. You'll be called in.
Meanwhile wait here."
Somewhere outside a noontime whistle sounded.
Time. Wait. Waiting.
Andrew mused dejectedly: Waiting was what he had done too much of. He had
waited too long. Waited-until a patient-a young patient, who should have
lived for many more years-had died.
After his discovery, four years and eight months earlier, that Noah
Townsend was a drug addict, Andrew had kept watch as best he could on the
older physician-the objective being to ensure that no medical mishap or
crucial misjudgment occurred. And while there were limits, obviously, to
the closeness of Andrew's scrutiny, he was satisfied that no serious
malpractice problem had existed.
As if recognizing and accepting his colleague's concern, Noah would often
discuss his difficult cases, and it was evident that, drugs or not, the
elderly doctor's diagnostic skills were continuing to function.
On the other hand, Dr. Townsend became noticeably more careless about
taking drugs, not bothering with the concealment from Andrew he had
practiced earlier, and showing increasing signs of
125
the drugs' effects-glazed eyes, slurred speech and shaky handsboth at the
office and St. Bede's. He left dozens of sample bottles of prescription
drugs lying around in his office, not even taking the trouble to put them
out of sight, and he would dip into themoccasionally when Andrew was with
him-as if they contained candy.
Sometimes Andrew wondered how Townsend could continue to be a drug addict,
yet function as well as he appeared to. Then Andrew reasoned: habit died
hard, and so did instincts. Noah had been practicing medicine for so many
years that much of what he did-including diagnoses which could be difficult
for others-came easily to him. In a way, Andrew thought, Noah was like a
flawed machine which goes on running of its own momentum. But a question
was: How long would the momentum last?
Still, at St. Bede's, no one else appeared to share Andrew's concern.
However, in 1961-a year after Andrew's discovery about Noah and the first,
abortive session with Leonard Sweeting-Noah Townsend did step down as chief
of medicine, also quitting the hospital's medical board. Whether the