Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
named Cleophas Moss. He had seated Andrew and Celia at a table overlooking
the sea. A candle stuck in a beer bottle was between them. Directly ahead
were scattered clouds and a near-full moon. "In New Jersey," Celia reminded
Andrew, "it's probably cold and rainy."
"We'll be there soon enough. Tell me some more about you and selling
drugs."
Her first assignment as a detail woman, Celia related, was to Nebraska
where, until then, Felding-Roth had had no sales representation.
"In a way it was good for me. I knew exactly where I stood because I was
starting from nothing. There was no organization, few records, no one to
tell me whom to call on or where."
"Did your friend Sam do that deliberately-as some kind of test?"
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"He may have. I never asked him."
Instead of asking, Celia got down to work. In Omaha she found a small
apartment and with that as a base she drove through the state, city by
city. In each place she tore out the "Physicians & Surgeons" section from
the yellow pages of a phone book, then typed up record sheets and began
making calls. There were 1,500 doctors, she discovered, in her territory;
later she decided to concentrate on 200 whom she estimated were the
biggest prescribers of drugs.
"You were a long way from home," Andrew said, "Were you lonely?"
"Didn't have time. I was too busy."
One early discovery was how difficult it was to get to see doctors. "I'd
spend hours sitting in waiting rooms. Then, when I'd finally get in, a
doctor might give me five minutes, no more. Finally a doctor in North
Platte threw me out of his office, but he did me a big favor at the same
time."
"How?"
Celia tasted some fried grouper and pronounced, "Loaded with
fat! I shouldn't eat it, ' but it's too good to pass up." She put down
her fork and sat back, remembering.
"He was an internist, like you, Andrew. I'd say about forty, and I think
he'd had a bad day. Anyway, I'd just started my sales talk and he stopped
me. 'Young lady,' he said, 'you're trying to talk professional medicine
with me, so let me tell you something. I spent four years in medical
school, another five being an intern and resident, I've been in practice
ten years, and while I don't know everything, I know so much more than
you it isn't funny. What you're trying to tell me, with your inadequate
knowledge, I could read in twenty seconds on an advertising page of any
medical magazine. So get out!' "
Andrew grimaced. "Cruel."
"But good for me," Celia said, "even though I went out feeling like
something scraped off the floor. Because he was right."
"Hadn't the drug company-Felding-Roth-given you any training?"
"Oh, a little. But short and superficial, a series of sales spiels,
mostly. My chemistry background helped, though not much. I simply wasn't
equipped to talk with busy, highly qualified doctors."
"Since you mention it," Andrew said, "that's a reason why some doctors
won't see drug detail men. Apart from having to listen to a
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canned sales pitch, you can get incorrect information that is dangerous.
Some detail men will tell you anything, even mislead you, to get you to
prescribe their product."
"Andrew dear, I want you to do something for me about that. I'll tell you
later."
"Okay-if I can. So what happened after North Platte?"
"I realized two things. First, I must stop thinking. like a salesman and
not do any kind of pushy selling. Second, despite doctors knowing more
than I did, I needed to find out specific things about drugs that they
didn't know, which might be helpful to them. In that way I'd become
useful. Incidentally, while attempting all that, I discovered something
else. Doctors learn a lot about disease, but they're not well informed
about drugs."
"True," Andrew agreed. "What you're taught in medical school about drugs
isn't worth a damn, and in practice it's hard enough to keep up with
medical developments, never mind drugs. So where prescribing is
concerned, it's sometimes trial and error."
"Then there was something else," Celia said. "I realized I must always
tell doctors the exact truth, and never exaggerate, never conceal. And
if I was asked about a competitor's product and it was better than ours,
I'd say so."
"How did you make this big change?"
"For quite a while I had four hours' sleep a night."
Celia described how, after a regular day's work, she would spend evenings
and weekends reading every drug manual she could get her hands on. She
studied each in detail, making notes and memo rizing. If there were
unanswered questions, she sought answers in libraries. She niade a trip
back to Felding-Roth headquarters in New Jersey and badgered former
colleagues on the scientific side to tell her more than the manuals did,
also what was being developed and would be available soon. Before long
her presentations to doctors improved; some doctors asked her to obtain
specific information, which she did. After a while she saw that she was
getting results. Orders for Felding-Roth drugs from her territory
increased.
Andrew said admiringly, "Celia, you're one of a kind. Unique."
She laughed. "And you're prejudiced, though I love it. Anyway, in just
over a year the company tripled its business in Nebraska."
"That's when they brought you in from the outfield?"
"They gave someone else who was newer, a man, the Nebraska territory and
me a more important one in New Jersey."
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"Just think," Andrew said, "if they'd sent you to some other place like
Illinois or California we'd never have met."
"No," she said confidently, "we'd have met. One way or another we were
destined to. 'Wedding is destiny.'"
He finished the quotation. "'And hanging likewise.'"
They both laughed.
"Fancy that!" Celia said, delighted. "A stuffy head-in -textbook
physician who can recite John Heywood."
"The same Heywood, a sixteenth-century writer, who also sang and played
music for Henry the Eighth," Andrew boasted, equally pleased.
They got up from the table and their host called over from his woodbuming
stove, "Dat good fish, you young honeymooners? Erryting okay?"
"Everything's very okay," Celia assured him. "With the fish and the
honeymoon."
Andrew said, amused, "No secrets on a small island." He paid for their
meal with a ten-shilling Bahamian note-a modest sum when translated into
dollars-and waved away change.
Outside, where it was cooler now, and with the sea breeze freshening,
they happily linked arms and walked back up the quiet, winding road.
It was their last day.
As if in keeping with the sadness of departure, the Bahamas weather had
turned gloomy. A stratocumulus overcast was accompanied by morning
showers while a strong northeast wind whipped whitecaps on the sea and
set waves beating heavily onshore.
Andrew and Celia were to leave at midday by Bahamas Airways from Rock
Sound, connecting at Nassau with a northbound Pan Am flight which would
get them to New York that night. They were due in Morristown the
following day where, until they found a suitable house, Andrew's
apartment on South Street would be home. Celia, who had been living in
furnished rooms in Boonton, had already moved out from there, putting
some of her things in storage.
In the honeymoon bungalow which they would leave in less than an hour
Celia was packing, her clothes spread out on the double bed. She called
to Andrew, who was in the bathroom shaving, "It's been so wonderful here.
And this is just the beginning."
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Through the open doorway he answered, "A spectacular beginning! Even so,
I'm ready to get back to work."
"You know something, Andrew? I think you and I thrive on work. We have that
in common, and we're both ambitious. We'll always be that way."
"Uh-huh." He emerged from the bathroom naked, wiping his face with a towel.
"No reason not to stop work once in a while, though. Provided there's a
good reason."
Celia started to say, "Do we have time?" but was unable to finish because
Andrew was kissing her.
Moments later he murmured, "Could you please clear that bed?"
Reaching behind, without looking and with one arm around Andrew, Celia
began to throw clothes on the floor.
"That's better," he said as they lay down where the clothes had been. "This
is what beds are for."
She giggled. "We could be late for our flight."
"Who cares?"
Soon after, she said contentedly, "You're right. Who cares?" And later,
tenderly and happily, "I care and then, "Oh, Andrew, I love you so!"
4
Aboard Pan American Flight 206 to New York were copies of that day's New
York Times. Leafing through the newspaper, Celia observed, "Nothing much
changed while we were away."
A dispatch from Moscow quoted Nikita Khrushchev as challenging the United
States to a "missile-shooting match." A future world war, the Soviet leader
boasted, would be fought on the American continent, and he predicted "the
death of capitalism and the universal triumph of communism."
President Eisenhower, on the other hand, assured Americans that U.S.
defense spending would keep pace with Soviet challenges.
And an investigation into the gangland slaying of Mafia boss
40
Albert Anastasia, gunned down while in a barber's chair at New York's
Park-Sheraton Hotel, was continuing, so far without result.
Andrew, too, skimmed the newspaper, then put it away.
It would be a four-hour flight aboard the propeller-driven DC-713 and
dinner was served soon after takeoff. After dinner Andrew reminded his
wife, "You said there was something you wanted me to do. Something about
drug company detail men."
"Yes, there is." Celia Jordan settled back comfortably in her seat, then
reached for Andrew's hand and held it. "it goes back to that talk we had
the day after you used Lotromycin, and your patient recovered. You told
me you were changing your mind about the drug industry, feeling more
favorable, and I said don't change it too much because there are things
which are wrong and which I hope to alter. Remember?"
"How could I forget?" He laughed. "Every detail of that day is engraved
on my soul."
"Good! So let me fill in some background."
Looking sideways at his wife, Andrew marveled again at how much drive and
intelligence was contained in such a small, attractive package. In the
years ahead, he reflected, he would need to stay alert and informed just
to keep up with Celia mentally. Now, he concentrated on listening.
The pharmaceutical industry in 1957, Celia began, was in some ways still
too close to its roots, its early origins.
"We started off, not all that long ago, selling snake oil at country
fairs, and fertility potions, and a pill to cure everything from headache
to cancer. The salesmen who sold those things didn't care what they