Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
brokerage transaction slips. His hands were shaking as he picked it up,
then followed with the other papers, inspecting.them one by one and clearly
with equal recognition. As he progressed, his face went ashen and his mouth
worked spasmodically. Lord wondered if Mace would have a stroke or heart
attack on the spot. But instead, putting the papers down, Mace asked in a
whisper, "Where did you get these?"
"That isn't important," Lord answered briskly. "What matters is: we have
them and are considering making them available to the Attorney General and
probably the press. In that event, of course, there will be an inquiry, and
if you've been involved in more incidents of the same kind, those will come
out too."
From Mace's increasingly frightened expression, Lord knew his last random
shot had hit home. There were more incidents. Now each of them knew it.
Lord remembered something he had once said to Sam Hawthome in foreseeing
what was happening now. "When the time comes, let me do the dirty work. "
Then he had added silently, I might even enjoy it. Well, now that it was
happening, Lord realized, he was enjoying it. It gave him pleasure to wield
power over Mace, to behold an adversary so expert in dishing out
humiliation now experiencing the same, and suffering and squirming.
"You'll go to jail, of course," Lord pointed out, "and I imagine there'll
be a big fine which should clean you out financially."
Mace said desperately, "This is blackmail. You could be . , ." His voice
was nervous, thin and reedy. Lord roughly cut him off.
"Forget that! There are plenty of ways of handling this so our company's
involvement isn't known, and there are no witnesses here, just you and me."
Lord reached over, gathered up the papers he had shown to Mace, and
returned them to his briefcase. He had remembered, just in time, that his
own fingerprints were on them; no sense in taking a chance on leaving
evidence behind.
Mace was a broken man. Lord saw with disgust there was spittle
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on the other man's lips which bubbled as he asked feebly, "What do you
want?"
"I think you know," Lord said. "I guess you could sum up what we would
like as 'an attitude of reasonableness.' "
A despairing whisper. "You want that drug approved. Montayne."
Lord remained silent.
"Listen," Mace pleaded, half sobbing now, "I meant it when I said there
is a problem . . . that Australian case, the doubts about Montayne . .
. I truly believe there may be something there . . . you ought to . . ."
Lord said contemptuously, "We've already talked about it. Better people
than you have assured us the Australian case was meaningless."
Again a silence.
"If it happens . . . the approval?"
"in certain circumstances," Lord said carefully, "the papers from which
the copies I have shown you were made would not be given to the Attorney
General or the press. Instead they would be handed over to you with a
guarantee that, to the best of our knowledge, no other copies exist."
"How could I be sure?"
"On that, you would have to take my word."
Mace was attempting to recover; there was savage hatred in his eyes.
"What's your word worth, you bastard?"
"Forgive my mentioning it," Vincent Lord said calmly, "but you're in no
position to call anybody names."
It took two weeks. Even with Gideon Mace impelling them, the wheels of
bureaucracy needed time to turn. But at the end of that time, approval
of Montayne was afait accompli. The drug could be prescribed and sold,
with FDA approval, throughout the United States.
At Felding-Roth there was joy that the company's February marketing
target would now be met.
Taking no chances on the mail or another messenger, Vincent Lord traveled
to Washington and delivered the incriminating papers personally to Dr.
Mace.
Lord had kept his word. All additional copies were destroyed.
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In the privacy of Mace's office, with both men standing, a minimum of words
passed between them.
"This is what was promised." Lord proffered a brown manila envelope.
Mace accepted the envelope, inspected its contents, then tumed his eyes
toward Lord. In a voice dripping hatred, he said, "You and your company now
have an enemy at FDA. I give you my waming: someday you'll regret this."
Lord shrugged, made no reply, and left.
10
In November, on a Friday afternoon, Celia visited Dr. Maud Stavely at the
New York headquarters of Citizens for Safer Medicine.
The visit was an impulse decision. Celia was in Manhattan anyway, with two
hours free between appointments, when she decided to satisfy her curiosity
about an adversary she had never met. She did not telephone in advance,
knowing that if she did, Stavely would almost certainly refuse to see her.
That kind of turndown had been experienced by others in the pharmaceutical
business.
Celia remembered something which Lorne Eagledon, president of the
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association in Washington, had told her not
long before. Eagledon, genial and easygoing, had been a govemment lawyer
before his present trade association job.
"As head of PMA, representing all the major drug companies," he said, "I
like to keep contact with consumer groups. Sure, we oppose each other, but
sometimes they have useful things to say, and our industry should listen.
That's why I invite Ralph Nader to lunch twice a year. True, Ralph and I
don't have much common ground, but we talk, and listen to each other's
viewpoints, which is a civilized thing to do. But when I invited Maud
Stavely to have lunch for the same reason-oh, boy!"
With prompting from Celia, the PMA chief had continued, "Well, Dr. Stavely
informed me she had plenty to do in her full-
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time fight against a thoroughly bad, immoral industry--ourswithout wasting
her valuable time on a big-business lackey with unacceptable opinions-me.
Furthermore, she said never mind lunch-she would choke on a chocolate bar
paid for with drug firms' tainted money." Eagledon had laughed. "So we
never met, which I regret."
A dreary rain was falling as Celia's taxi stopped at a dingy sixstory
building on Thirty-seventh Street near Seventh Avenue. The building's
main floor was occupied by a plumbing supplies store whose front window
had been broken, then patched with tape. From a dowdy hallway with
peeling paint, a tiny, arthritic elevator grumbled its way to the top
floor and CSM.
As Celia left the elevator she faced an open door and, in a small room
beyond, an elderly white-haired woman seated at a battered metal desk.
A card facing outward read: Volunteer: Mr& 0. Thom. The woman had been
pecking at an Underwood typewriter circa 1950. Looking up as Celia
entered, she announced, "I keep telling them I won't do any more work
here unless this wretched machine is fixed. It's the capital '1' that
never works. How can you write to people without an '17'
Celia said helpfully, "You could try using 'we' every time instead."
Mrs. 0. Thom snapped, "What about this letter, then? It's supposed to go
to Idaho. Should I rename the state Wedaho?"
"I do see your problem," Celia said. "I wish I could help. Is Dr. Stavely
in?"
"Yes, she's in. Who are you?"
"Oh, just someone interested in your organization. I'd like to talk to
her."
Mrs. Thom looked as if she would ask more questions, then changed her
mind. Getting up, she walked through another doorway and out of sight.
While she was away, Celia caught glimpses of several other people working
in adjoining rooms. There was a sense of busy activity, including the
sounds of another typewriter clattering and brisk phone conversations.
Closer to hand, brochures and leaflets, some prepared for mailing, were
piled high. A stack of incoming mail awaited opening. Judging by
appearances, though, CSM was not burdened with excess cash. The office
furnishings, Celia thought, were either someone else's discards or had
been bought at a junk dealer's. Long ago, the floors were carpeted, but
now the carpeting was worn so thin it had almost disappeared, and
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in places bare boards were visible through holes. As in the downstairs
lobby, what was left of the paint was peeling.
Mrs. Thom returned. "All right. Go in there." She pointed to a doorway.
With murmured thanks, Celia did so.
The room she entered was as shabby as the offices outside.
"Yes, what is it?" Dr. Maud Stavely, seated at another dented desk, looked
up from a paper she was reading as her visitor entered.
After her impression of these surroundings, coupled with what she had heard
about the person she was facing, Celia was surprised to see an attractive,
auburn-haired woman, slim and well groomed, with carefully manicured hands,
and probably in her early forties. The voice, though incisive and
impatient, was cultured, with a slight New England accent. The clothes she
had on-a maroon wool skirt and a pink tailored blouse-were inexpensive, yet
worn stylishly. The eyes-Stavely's strongest single feature-were blue,
direct, penetrating, and conveyed to Celia that an answer to the question
was overdue.
"I'm a pharmaceutical executive," Celia said. "I apologize for barging in,
but I wanted to meet you."
There was several seconds' silence. The eyes boring into her had hardened,
Celia thought, and were making an appraisal.
"I suppose you're Jordan."
"Yes." Celia was surprised. "How did you know?"
"I've heard of you. There aren't many women executives in that rotten
industry, and certainly no one else who has sold out decent womanhood as
much as you."
Celia said mildly, "What makes you so sure I've-as you put itsold out?"
"Because you wouldn't work in the selling end of the drug business if you
hadn't."
"I worked originally as a chemist," Celia pointed out. "Then, like others,
I moved up through our company."
"None of that interests me. Why have you come here?"
Celia tried countering antagonism with a smile. "I meant what I said about
wanting to meet you. I had an idea we might talk, hear each other's
opinions. Even if we disagree, we could both gain something."
The friendliness achieved nothing. The other woman inquired coldly, "Gain
what?"
Celia shrugged. "I suppose, some understanding. But never
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mind. Obviously it wasn't a good idea." She turned away, prepared to go,
unwilling to accept further rudeness.
"What do you wish to know?"
The words were a shade less hostile. Celia hesitated, uncertain whether to
go or stay.
Stavely pointed to a chair. "You're here, so sit down. I'll give you ten
minutes, then I've other things to do."
In different circumstances Celia would have expressed herself forcefully,
but curiosity caused her to remain low-key. "One thing I'd like to know is
why you hate the pharmaceutical industry so much."