Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
was not the cause of the three babies in Australia, France and Spain being
born as 'vegetables'-babies, we ought to remember, who cannot move their
limbs and lack normally functioning brains." If others were afraid of
putting unpleasant truths into words, she decided, she would not be.
Lord said, "I'm glad you were listening."
She ignored the unpleasant tone and asked, "Since Montayne was not the
cause of those deformities, what was?"
"I thought I made clear it could be one of several, or even many, causes."
She persisted, "But which one?"
Lord said exasperatedly, "How do I know which one? It could have been a
different cause in each case. All I know is, based on scientific judgment
by experts on the spot, the cause was not Montayne."
"So the truth is, no one knows with certainty what did damage those fetuses
and cause the deformed births."
The research director threw up his hands. "For God's sake, I've already
said so! In different words, maybe, but-"
"Celia," Sam interjected, "just what are you getting at?"
"What I'm getting at," she answered, "is that despite everything Vince has
said, I'm uncomfortable. No one knows. I'm still not satisfied. I'm having
doubts."
Someone asked, "What kind of doubts?"
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"About Montayne." It was Celia's turn to survey the faces around her. "I
have a feeling-if you like, call it instinct-that something is wrong,
something we don't yet know about. Also that there are questions to which
we ought to know the answers, but we don't."
Lord sneered, "A woman's instinct, I suppose."
She snapped, "What's wrong with that?"
Sam ordered sharply, "Everybody cool it!" He told Celia, "If you have a
suggestion, let's hear it."
"My suggestion," she said, "is that we should delay the launching of
Montayne."
She was conscious of everyone in the room regarding her with incredulity.
Sam's lips had tightened. "Delay for how long, and precisely why?"
Celia said deliberately and carefully, "I suggest a postponement of six
months. In that time there may be no more instances of defective births.
Or there could be. I hope it doesn't happen, but if it does there could
be information we do not have now, and which would give us, perhaps,
greater confidence to proceed with Montayne."
There was a shocked silence which Sam broke. "You can't be gerious."
"I am very serious." She met his eyes directly. When she came here she
had been uncertain of her own feelings. She had been uneasy-but with
ambivalence. Now she was ambivalent no longer because, jarfrom reassuring
her, Vincent Lord's emphatic certaint)-too much certainty!-had reinforced
her doubts.
And yes, she admitted to herself in taking the stand she had just
declared, she was relying on her instincts, and little more. But her
instincts had been right before.
Celia knew there was a difficult task ahead of her to convince the
others, with Sam the most important. But they had to be convinced. They
must be persuaded that it was now in everyone's best interest to delay
Montayne's American debut-in the interest of pregnant women who might
take the drug and have their babies endangered; of the company,
Felding-Roth; and of all of them here who were responsible for what the
company did.
"Do you have any idea, " Sam was asking, still shocked, "what a delay in
launching Montayne would involve?"
"Of course I do!" Celia let her own voice take on an edge. "Who
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would know better than me? Has anyone been more involved with Montayne than
I have?"
"No," Sam said. "That's why what you're saying is so unbelie'vable."
"It's also why you can be sure I'm not making the suggestion lightly."
Sam turned toward Seth Feingold. "What do you estimate it would cost us to
delay Montayne?"
The elderly comptroller looked uncomfortable. He was Celia's friend. Also
he was out of his depth where scientific matters were concerned and plainly
wished he were not involved. Bill Ingram, too, appeared discomfited; Celia
sensed that Bill was torn by inner conflicts-loyalty to her and probably
his own ideas about Montayne. Well, we all have our problems, she thought,
and I, at this moment, certainly have mine.
One thing had been resolved, though. There was no longer any sense of
haste. Clearly, Sam and others had accepted that the issue raised by Celia
must be resolved, however long it took.
Feingold had his head down and was rnaking calculations with a pencil.
Looking up, he advised, "In round figures we've committed thirty-two
million dollars to Montayne. Not all of it has been spent, so perhaps a
quarter would be retrievable. But there are substantial general costs I've
not included. As to the real cost of a delay, it's impossible to guess. It
would depend on the length of delay and the eventual effect on projected
sales."
"I'll tell you one effect there would be," Hammond, of public affairs,
declared. "If we delay Montayne now, the press will have a field day.
They'll discredit the drug and it might never recover."
Sam acknowledged, "I've thought of that too. Delay at this point would, in
some ways, be as bad as canceling."
He swung back to Celia, his tone accusing. "If we did as you suggest-and
for the vaguest of reasons-have you given any thought to the questions and
angry reaction there would be from the board of directors and stockholders?
And have you considered our employees who would have to be laid off, who
might lose their jobs permanently?"
"Yes," she said, trying to stay calm, concealing the agony this was causing
her, "I have thought of all that. I thought about it last night and through
most of today."
Sam grunted skeptically, then returned to Feingold. "So one way or another
we'd be taking a chance of losing twenty-eight million,
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more or less, to say nothing of a much greater loss of anticipated
profits."
The comptroller glanced regretfully at Celia as he answered, "That's the
potential loss, it's true."
Sam said grimly, "And we can't afford it, can we?"
Feingold shook his head sadly. "No."
"However," Celia pointed out, "the loss could be greater still if we ran
into trouble with Montayne."
Glen Nicholson said uneasily, "There is that to think about." It was the
first support, even if tentative, which Celia had received and she shot
the manufacturing chief a grateful glance.
Vincent Lord chimed in, "But we don't expect to have trouble. That is,
unless the rest of you"-he surveyed the others-"are willing to accept the
lady as our ranking scientific expert."
There was some halfhearted laughter, quickly snuffed out at an impatient
gesture from Sam.
"Celia," Sam said, "please listen to me carefully." His voice was
serious, but more controlled than a few moments ago, and again their eyes
met directly. "I'd like you to reconsider. It could be that you've spoken
hastily and made a judgment without weighing all the implications. Each
of us here does similar things at times. I certainly have, and have had
to swallow my pride and backtrack, admitting I've been wrong. If you were
to do that now, none of us would think an iota the worse of you, and what
happened here will end here. I promise that, just as I urge you to change
your mind. What do you say?"
She was silent, not wanting to rush into a commitment either way without
considering it first. Sam had just offered her-easily, graciously, as was
his way--a dignified route out. All she had to do was utter a word, a
phrase, and the impasse would be over, a crisis averted as swiftly as it
came. The offer was extraordinarily tempting.
Before she could answer, Sam added, "You have a lot at stake personally."
She knew exactly what he meant. Her appointment as corporate vice
president of sales and merchandising had not yet been confirmed. And if
what was happening here proceeded to its logical conclusion, it might
never be.
Sam was right. There was a lot at stake.
She took a moment more to consider, then told him quietly and decisively,
"Sam, I'm sorry. I have weighed everything. I do know
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what's at stake. But I must still recommend that we delay the introduction
of Montayne."
It was done. As Sam's face clouded, then suffused with anger, she knew
that now there could be no turning back.
"Very well," he pronounced tautly. "At least we know where we stand." He
considered, then went on, "Earlier I said there would be no formal vote
here. Cancel that. I want us to go on record. Seth, please take notes."
The comptroller, his expression still sad, again produced his pencil and
held it poised.
'I have already made my own position clear," Sam said. "I am, of course,
in favor of continuing our introduction of Montayne, as planned. I wish
to know who agrees or disagrees. Those who agree, raise their hands."
Vincent Lord's hand shot up. Those of Dr. Starbut, Hammond, and two other
vice presidents followed. Nicholson, apparently overcoming his doubts,
raised his hand too. Bill Ingram hesitated; he looked at Celia in mute
appeal. But she turned away, refusing to help him; he must make his own
decision. After a second more, Bill's hand went up.
Sam and the others were looking at Seth Feingold. The comptroller sighed,
put down his pencil and waveringly raised his hand.
"That's nine to one," Sam said. "It doesn't leave any doubt that this
company will continue with the launching of Montayne."
Once more there was a silence, this time awkward, as if no one knew what
to do or say next. Amid it, Sam stood up.
"As you know," he said, "when all of this began, I was about to leave to
see my (laughter and grandson at the hospital. I'll go there now." But
the earlier joy had left his voice. Sam nodded to the other men, but
pointedly ignored Celia as he left.
She remained in her seat. Bill Ingram, now standing, moved toward her.
"I'm sorry . . ." he began.
She waved him to silence. "It doesn't matter. I don't want to hear."
Suddenly, unexpectedly, she realized that everything she had built up for
herself within the company-her position, authority, reputation, future
prospects-had come tumbling down. Could she even survive here now? She
wasn't sure.
Bill said, "I have to ask this. What are you going to do?" When she
didn't answer, he went on. "Surely, now that you've made your
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protest, now that everyone knows where you stand about Montayne . . . surely
you can go on directing sales?"
Celia responded dully, not wanting to make decisions now, "I don't know. I
just don't know." But she did know that, at home tonight, she would have to
think her position through.
Seth Feingold told her, "I hated to vote against you, Celia. But you know
how it is-I don't understand anything scientific."
She glared at him. "Then why did you vote at all? You could have said that,