Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
well-balanced children.
An important part of it, of course, was that Winnie and Hank March had
run the family house, as they continued to do, with cheerful efficiency.
During a celebration of Winnie's fifteenth year of employment, which
coincided with her thirty-fourth birthday, it was Andrew who remembered
Winnie's long-abandoned plan to move on to Australia. He remarked, "What
the Aussies lost, the Jordans gained."
Only one adverse note obtruded on Winnie's sunny nature: her failure to
have a child, which she dearly wanted. She confided to Celia, "Me an'
'Ank keep tryin'. Lordy, how we tryl-some days I'm fair wrung out. But
it don't ever click."
At Celia's urging, Andrew arranged fertility tests for Winme and her
husband. The tests proved positive in each case. "Both you and Hank are
capable of having children," Andrew explained one evening while he,
Winnie and Celia were together in the kitchen. "It's simply a matter of
timing, in which your gynecologist will help, and also luck. You'll have
to go on trying."
"We will," Winnie said, then sighed. "But I won't tell 'Ank till
termorrer. I need one good night's sleep."
Celia did make a brief trip for the company to California in September
and she was in Sacramento, by chance standing not far from President
Ford, when an attempt was made on the President's life. Only the
ineptitude of the woman would-be assassin, who did not understand the
firearm she was using, prevented another historic tragedy. Celia was
shattered by the experience, and equally horrified to learn of a second
assassination attempt, in San Francisco, less than three weeks later.
Talking about it at home, with the family gathered for Thanksgiving, she
declared, "Some days I think we've become a more
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violent people, not less." Then rhetorically: "Where do ideas about
assassinations start?"
She had not expected an answer, but Bruce supplied one.
"Considering the business you're in, Mom, I'm surprised you don't know that
historically they started with drugs, which is what the word 'assassin'
means. It's from the Arabic hashfshT, or 'hashish-eater,' and in the
eleventh to thirteenth centuries an Islamic sect, the Nizari Ismd'fifts,
took hashish when committing acts of religious terrorism."
Celia said irritably, "If I don't know, it's because hashish isn't a drug
that's used pharmaceutically."
"It was once," Bruce answered calmly. "And not so long ago, either.
Psychiatrists used it against amnesia, but it didn't work and they stopped.
"I'll be darrined!" Andrew said, while Lisa regarded her brother with a
mixture of amusement and awe.
The new year of '76 brought a pleasant interlude in February with the
marriage of Juliet Hawthorne to Dwight Goodsmith, the young man Andrew and
Celia had met and liked at the Hawthornes' dinner party a year earlier.
Dwight, newly graduated from Harvard Law School, was about to begin work in
New York City where he and Juliet would live.
The wedding was a large and plush affair with three hundred and fifty
guests, Andrew and Celia among them. "After all," Lilian Hawthorne told
Celia, "it's the only wedding at which I'll be a bride's mother-at least,
I hope so."
Earlier, Lilian had confided her concern that Juliet, who was twenty,
should be marrying so young and abandoning college after only two years.
But on the day of the wedding Sam and Lilian seemed so radiantly happy that
such thoughts had clearly been put away-with good reason, Celia thought.
Watching Juliet and Dwight, an intelligent and talented, yet modest,
unaffected couple, she was impressed with them and had a conviction that
theirs was a marriage which would work.
In May of that year, something of special interest to Celia was the
publication of The Drugging of the Americas.
It was a book which attracted wide attention and cataloged the shameful
failure of American and other pharmaceutical firms doing business in Latin
America to supply warnings about adverse side effects of their prescription
drugs-warnings required by law in
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more sophisticated countries. Described and documented were the practices
which Celia, during her years in international sales, had observed
personally and had criticized at Felding-Roth.
What made the book different from routine, acerbic attacks on the
industry was the scholarly thoroughness of its author, Dr. Milton
Silverman, a pharmacologist and faculty member of the University of
California at San Francisco. Dr. Silverman had also testified a short
time earlier before a congressional committee which listened to him with
respect. In Celia's view it was one more warning that the pharmaceutical
business should accept moral obligations as well as legal ones.
She bought a half-dozen copies of the book and sent them to company
executives who responded predictably. Typical was Sam Hawthorne who
scribbled a meuio:
Basically I share Silverman's views and yours. However, if
changes are made there will have to be all-around agreement.
No one company can afford to put itself at a disadvantage to
all other competitors-especially ourselves at the moment be-
cause of our delicate financial condition.
To Celia, Sam's seemed a specious argument, though she did not contest it
further, knowing she would not win.
A considerable surprise was the response of Vincent Lord, who sent a
friendly note.
Thanks for the book. I agree there should be changes, but
predict OUT masters will kick and scream against them until
forced at pistol point to mend their ways. But keep trying. I'll
help when I can.
Increasingly of late, the director of research seemed to have mellowed,
Celia thought. She remembered sending him, thirteen years before, a copy
of The Feminine Mystique which he returned with a curt remark about
"rubbish." Or was it, she wondered, because Vince Lord had decided she was
now high enough in the company to be useful to him as an ally?
During April, Lisa telephoned home to report excitedly that she would be
heading for California in the fall. She had been accepted at Stanford
University. Then, in June, Lisa graduated from Emma Willard in a gracious
outdoor ceremony which Andrew, Celia and Bruce attended. Over a family
dinner in Albany that night Andrew
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observed, "Today's a high point, but otherwise I predict, worldwide, a dull
year."
Almost at once he was proved wrong by a daring Israeli airborne commando
raid on Entebbe Airport, Uganda, where more than a hundred hostages were
held captive, having been seized by Arab terrorists aided by the
treacherous Uganda President Idi Amin. As the free world cheered, delighted
to share some upbeat, inspirational news for a change, the Israelis freed
the hostages and flew them back to safety.
The dullness did return, however-as Andrew was quick to point out-when, at
the Democratic national convention in New York, an obscure Georgia
populist, leaning heavily on being a "bornagain" Southern Baptist, secured
the nomination for President.
Despite the American public's disenchantment, first with Nixon, now with
Ford, it seemed unlikely the newcomer could win. In the Felding-Roth
cafeteria Celia heard someone ask, "Is it conceivable that the highest
office in this world could be held by someone who calls himself Jimmy.
Yet, at the Morristown corporate headquarters there was little time for
thoughts of politics. Most attention was focused on the exciting new drug
soon to be released-Montayne.
It was almost two years since Celia had expressed to Sam her doubts and
unease about Montayne but, at Sam's urging, had agreed to keep an open mind
while studying research and testing data.
In the meantime there had been voluminous material, most of which Celia
read. As she did, her conviction grew that Sam was right: pharmaceutical
science had made amazing advances in fifteen years, and pregnant women
should not be denied a beneficial drug simply because another drug, long
ago, had proven harmful.
Equally significant: the testing of Montayne-first in France, subsequently
in Denmark, Britain, Spain, Australia, and now in the United States-had
clearly been as cautious and complete as human care could make it. Thus,
because of authenticated results and her own reading, Celia was not only
convinced of the safety of Montayne, but enthusiastic about its usefulness
and commercial possibilities.
At home, on several occasions, she attempted to share her knowledge with
Andrew, seeking to convert him to her changed opinions. But,
uncharacteristically, Andrew appeared to have a closed mind.
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He always managed to turn their conversation to other matters, makin.-
it clear that while wishing to avoid an argument, Montayne was a
subject ne preferred to hold at arm's length.
In the end Celia gave up, in Andrew's presence keeping her enthusiasm
to herself. There would be, she knew, many other outlets for it once
Feld in g-Roth's sah~s campaign be.-an in earnest.
8
"Thc impxviat thing afl of us in sales must remember and empha
size about M,,,)ntayne," Celia said into the podium microphone, "is
that it is a c~ripletely safe drug for pregnant women. More than
that- it is a joyous drug! Montayne is something which women
plagued by nausca and sickncss during pregnancies--have ne(-ded,
lorgtd for, aiid deserved for centuries. Now, at last, we of Felding
Roth, have become emancipators, freeing American women from
their ancient yoke, makin.- each day of prttgnancy better, brighter,
happier! The drug to end ',wrning sickness'forever is here! We have
it! "
There was a spirited '~-)urst of handclapping from the audience.
It was Oct3ber 1976. Celia was in San Francisco at a Ft~ldingRoth
regional sales -meeting, attended by the company's detail men and women,
sales supcr-isors and regional managers from nine western stat(~s,
inchiding Alaska and Hawaii. The three-day session was at the i-airmont
Hotel on Nob Hill, Celia and several other senior officei -,, of the
coinpany w~re staying at the elegant Stanford Court across the street.
Among them was Bill Ingram, once Celia's junior at O-T-C and now, as
deputy director of pharmaceutical sales, her principal assistant.
Marketing plans for Montayne were in high gear, and FeldingRoth hoped to
have the product on the market by February, now only four months away.
Meanwhile it was necessary that those who wov.ld be selling Montayne know
as much about the drug as possibie.
Among the sales force, enthusiasm about the prospects for
250
Montayne was running high, and someone at head office had composed a song
to be sung to the tune of "America the Beautiful."
0 beautiful for carefree days,
For dreams of motherhood,
For now in safe and simple ways,
All mornings can be good! Montayne, Montayne! Montayne, Montayne!