Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
activists. Another thing-when they're ruthless and unethical, as they can
be sometimes, you should ask yourself: where did they learn to be that
way? The answer is: from companies like yours, my dear, because, when no
one was watching them, ruthless and unethical is the way they were."
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Celia would have appreciated Andrew's last remark more if she had witnessed
a scene at the Citizens for Safer Medicine offices a few minutes after she
left on Friday afternoon.
Summoning an assistant, Dr. Stavely asked, "Has that woman who was with me
gone?"
When the answer was yes, Stavely instructed the young man, "I want a press
conference called for tomorrow morning-as early as you can arrange it. You
will say that the subject is an urgent, lifeand-death matter affecting
hospitals and patients. Make sure you get the television networks and press
wire services. There'll be a news release to be issued at the same time,
which I'm going to write now. Someone will have to work tonight to . . ."
The brisk, efficient instructions continued, and at 10 A.M. next morning
the press conference began.
Facing reporters, and on camera, Dr. Stavely described the IN. fluid
problem she had discussed with Celia the preceding day-the
bacteria-contaminated bottles and the resultant septicemia, believed
responsible for several deaths. What the CSM leader did not mention was
either Celia or the information Celia had given her, namely that the FDA
had already decided to forbid further use of all existing IN. fluid
supplies from the company concerned, and that an announcement to that
effect would be made on Monday.
Instead, Stavely declared, "Citizens for Safer Medicine deplores the
inaction both of the Food and Drug Administration and the manufacturer of
this potentially deadly material. Further, we demand-yes, demand!-that all
supplies of this IN. fluid be banned from use-and recalled . - ."
The effect was immediate. The major TV networks carried the story on their
evening national news, while next day's Sunday newspapers gave it
prominence, in many cases using an Associated Press photo of Stavely in
action. Thus on Monday, when FDA delivered its announcement, most
reporters-not bothering to check-began their stories, "Today, responding
swiftly to a demand by Dr. Maud Stavely and her Citizens for Safer
Medicine, the FDA announced a ban on further use by hospitals of . . ."
It was a triumphal coup dl&lat for CSM and, soon afterward, was used
prominently in a mailed brochure appealing for donations.
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Celia, who followed the sequence of events with some embarrassment, kept
the knowledge of her own involvement to herself. She had learned a lesson.
She had, she realized, been foolishly indiscreet, and then had been made
use of by a master tactician.
To Celia's surprise there was not, anywhere at Felding-Roth headquarters, a
trial transcript of the Australian court case which had involved Montayne.
Nor could the company's legal department locate one in the United States.
There were plenty of reports that quoted it, but now Celia wanted to read
the proceedings in their entirety. Although, obviously, Maud Stavely had a
copy, Celia felt disinclined to ask Citizens for Safer Medicine to lend it;
she therefore instructed the legal department to cable a correspondent law
firm in Australia and have one sent by air.
Meanwhile there were plenty of other things to do. The promotional program
that would launch Montayne was now proceeding at a frantic tempo as the
February deadline neared. Celia, aided by her deputy, Bill Ingram, was
responsible for the several million dollars spent already; still more money
was allocated for the months ahead.
Elaborate advertising--expensive four-page multicolor insertswas appearing
in a profusion of medical magazines, while an avalanche of direct mail was
going out to the nation's physicians and pharmacists. Among promotional
items being sent was a cassette tape--on one side, a recording of the
beautiful Brahms "Wiegenlied" (Lullaby), on the other, a clinical
description of Montayne. Backing up the advertising and direct mail, the
company's detail men and women were delivering thousands of sample packages
of Montayne to doctors, at the same time dropping on their desks golf tees
and ball markers imprinted with "Montayne."
At all levels of the company, as with any new drug launching. there was a
mix of excitement, circus, nervousness and hope.
Also creating hope, in an even wider dimension, was some news
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from the Felding-Roth Research Institute in Britain. There, it seemed,
Martin Peat-Smith's scientific team had successfully broken through the
technical barrier which had baffled them for so long. Complete details were
lacking-Martin's report had been brief and in general terms only-but it
appeared the now demolished barrier was the one of which Dr. Rao Sastri had
said, when talking with Celia eighteen months earlier, "There are no tech-
niques to take us further . . . possibly in ten years from now
Celia was delighted to learn that, in this specific at least, Sastri had
been wrong and Martin right.
What was known, via a letter from Nigel Bentley, the Harlow administrator,
was that the British technical achievement involved purification of a brain
peptide mixture obtained from rats, and maze tests on rats had shown it to
be effective in improving the memories of older animals. More experimental
work was proceeding.
Clearly, while a medication to improve human memory was an unknown number
of years away, it was much more of a possibility than at any previous time.
The news was timely in that it forestalled the latest attempt, by some
members of the board, to close the Harlow institute-again because of high
costs and an absence of results. Now, with some positive results, Harlow
and the mental aging project appeared safe for the time being.
This, too, pleased Celia, who felt happier in having recommended against
closure of Harlow a year and a half earlier.
In mid-December the Australian trial transcript for which Celia had asked
arrived on her desk. It was a bulky typewritten volume, several hundred
pages long. By then, however, the pressures on Celia were such that she was
obliged to put it aside for later reading. The transcript still had not
been read by early January, when another event occurred ' which was totally
unexpected and seemed likely to push her reading even farther into the
future.
Now that President-elect Carter had surprised the world by securing the
White House tenancy for the next four years, outriders for the new
administration were urgently recruiting candidates for the many government
posts which Republicans would soon vacate. Among those recruited was
Felding-Roth's corporate vice president for sales and merchandising, Xavier
Rivkin.
Xav Rivkin, a lifelong Democrat and more recently an ardent
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Carter supporter, had given time and money in the election campaign; be
also knew the new President, having served with him in the Navy. From all
this, a reward now arrived-the offer of a post as assistant secretary in
the Department of Commerce.
Within Felding-Roth, news of the offer was at first kept secret, as was
the fact that Xav wanted to accept. Sam Hawthorne and a few members of
the board, between whom the matter was discussed privately, believed he
should. There was an awareness that it would do the company no harm to
have a friend in Washington at Commerce. Quietly, a special and generous
early pension arrangement was made, with Rivkin due to leave soon after
the January 20 presidential inauguration.
In the second week of January, Sam sent for Celia and informed her of the
Rivkin arrangements, of which she had not heard previously but which
would be common knowledge in a day or two.
"Quite frankly," he said, "no one, including me, expected this to happen
so soon but when Xav leaves, you'll move up to be vice president of sales
and merchandising. I've had discussions with the same members of the
board who approved the arrangements about Xav, and we realize this has
happened at an awkward time, with Montayne about to--" Sam stopped. "Is
something wrong?"
"Not really," Celia said. They had been standing, in his office, and she
asked, "Do you mind if I sit down?"
"Of course. Please do." He waved her to a chair.
"And give me a minute to get my gears engaged." Her voice was huskier
than usual. "You may not realize it, but you did just drop a
thunderbolt."
Sam looked contrite. "Oh, hell, I'm sorry! I should have made this more
of an occasion. Some days I operate in such a damned hurry that-"
Celia said, "This way is fine. In fact any way is fine. You were saying
about Montayne . . ."
But the words were coming from a part of herself that was detached. Her
mind whirling, she was remembering an occasion seventeen years earlier
when the then vice president of sales, Irv Gregson, now long departed,
had ordered her angrily from the company's New York sales convention
while an audience of hundreds watched . . . and Sam had saved her-from
the vice president and all the othersand now it was Sam who . . . Dammit!
I'm not going to cry, she told herself But she did, a little, and looked
up to see Sam holding out a handkerchief and smiling.
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"You earned it, Celia," he said gently. "All on your own, every step of the
way, and what I should have said sooner is--congratulations! I told Lilian
at breakfast and she's as pleased as I am; she said to tell you we'll all
get together soon."
"Thank you." She took the handkerchief, wiped her eyes, then said
matter-of-factly, "Please thank Lilian; and I thank you too, Sam, Now about
Montayne."
"Well," he cxplained, "because you've been so close to the plans for
launching Montayne, I and those board members I spoke of would like you to
see them through, even while you're taking over the bigger responsibility.
It will mean a heavy load on you . . ."
Celia assured him, "That won't be a problem. And I agree about Montayne."
"At the same time," Sam pointed out, "you should think about a successor as
director of pharmaceutical sales."
"Bill Ingram," Celia said without hesitation. "He's good and he's readv.
He's also been working on Montayne."
The hitch ing-you r- wagon-to-som eon e-else's-sta r principle, she
thought, just as she had described it to Andrew on their honeymoon ---also
long ago. Celia had followed Sam upward, and how successfully her plan had
worked! Now Bill had followed Celia,- and who, she wondered, had already
attached themselves to Bill?
With an effort-her mind for the moment split in two---she concluded her
discussion with Sam.
That evening, when Celia told Andrew of her impending promotion, he hugged
her and said, "I'm proud of you! But then I always have been."
"Most of the time," she corrected him. "There were moments when you
weren't."