Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
the injections had begun. Now Yvonne was returning the last rat to its
cage.
It was still early Sunday morning. Apart from the two of them and a
watchman they had spoken to on the way in, the institute was silent and
deserted.
Like the other animals that preceded it, the twelfth rat began eating
from a container in its cage.
Martin observed, "They still feed well."
"They all do," Yvonne agreed. "Now, will you tell me what this is about?"
"All fight. Because the rats we gave peptides to have lost weight, got
thin, and some of them are gaunt, all of us here assumed their general
health is poorer." He added ruefully, "It wasn't very scientific."
"What difference does it make?"
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"Possibly a lot. Supposing their health hasn't worsened. Suppose they're
all perfectly well? Maybe more so than before. Suppose Peptide 7, as well
as improving memory, caused a healthy weight loss.11
"You mean
"I mean," Martin said, "we may have stumbled on something for which
people have been searching for centuries-a way to metabolize food in the
body without producing fat and therefore weight
gain."
Yvonne regarded him openmouthed. "But that could be terribly important."
"Of course-if it's true."
"But it's something you weren't looking for."
"Lots of discoveries have happened when scientists were seeking something
else."
"So what do you do next?"
Martin considered. "I need advice from specialists. Tomorrow I'll arrange
to get them here."
"In that case," Yvonne said hopefully, "can we go back to your house
now?"
He put his arm around her. "I never heard a better idea."
"I'll send you a detailed report, of course," the visiting veterinarian
informed Martin, "and it will include measurement of body fat, blood
chemistry, urine and stool analyses done in my own lab. But I can tell
you right now that those are some of the healthiest rats I've come
across, particularly remembering their advanced age."
"Thank you, Doctor," Martin said. "It's what I'd hoped for."
Today was Tuesday and the veterinarian, Dr. Ingersoll, an elderly
specialist in small mammals, had come from London on a morning train. He
would return that afternoon.
Another expert, a nutritionist from Cambridge, was due at the Harlow
institute two days later.
"I suppose," Dr. Ingersoll said, "you wouldn't care to tell me precisely
what it is you've been injecting into those rats of yours?"
"If you don't mind," Martin replied, "I'd prefer not. At least not
yet.,,
The veterinarian nodded. "I rather thought you'd say that. Well, whatever
it is, my dear fellow, you are obviously onto something interesting."
Martin smiled, and left it there.
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On Thursday, the nutritionist, Ian Cavaliero, provided information that was
even more intriguing.
"Possibly what you have done in treating those rats," he pronounced, "is
change the functioning of either their endocrine glands or their central
nervous systems, or perhaps both. The result is, the calories they take in
with food are converted to heat instead of fat. If not carried to extremes,
there's no harm in that. Their bodies simply get rid of the excess heat
through evaporation or some other means."
Dr. Cavaliero, a young scientist whom Martin had known at Cambridge, was
widely regarded as a leading authority on nutrition.
"New data are emerging," he reported, "showing that different
individuals---or animals-have differing efficiencies for utilizing
calories. Some calories go into fat, but a lot get used for the kind of
body work we never see or feel. For example, cells pumping ions, such as
sodium, out of themselves and into the blood in a continuous cycling
process."
The nutritionist continued, "Other calories must go into heat, just to
maintain body temperature. It's been discovered, though, that the
proportion going to heat, metabolic work, or fat varies widely. Therefore
if you can change and control that proportionas you appear to be doing with
these animals-it represents a major advance."
A small group whom Martin had invited to join the discussion with Cavaliero
listened intently. It comprised Rao Sastri, two other staff scientists, and
Yvonne.
Sastri interjected, "That fat-work-heat variation is undoubtedly why some
fortunate persons can eat large meals, yet never put on weight."
"Exactly." The nutritionist smiled. "We've all met, and probably envied,
those kind of people. But something else may be affecting your rats also--a
satiety factor."
Martin said, "Through the CNST'
"Yes. The central nervous system is, of course, highly regulated by brain
peptides. And since you inform me that the injected material affects the
brain, it could be reducing brain signals of hunger . . . So, one way or
another, your compound plainly has a desirable antiobesity effect."
The discussion continued and, next day, Martin used Cavaliero's
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words, "desirable antiobesity effect," in a confidential report sent
directly to Sam Hawthorne.
"While an enhancement of memory through Peptide 7 remains our primary
objective," Martin wrote, "we will experiment additionally with what, at
first glimpse, appears as a positive, promising side effect which may
have clinical possibilities."
While the report was restrained, excitement among Martin and his Harlow
colleagues was at fever pitch.
308
FOUR
1977-1985
Majestically, and with a solid dignity no other form of transportation yet
devised could match, the cargo liner SS Santa Isabella edged its way along
Fort Armstrong Channel and into Honolulu Harbor.
Andrew and Celia were on deck, standing with other passengers, below the
bridge and forward.
Andrew, with binoculars, was already scanning the dockside and port
buildings coming into view. His scrutiny had a purpose.
As the Aloha Tower loomed ahead, made golden by Hawaiian sunshine from
an azure sky, the ship swung smoothly to starboard, tugs fussing beside
it. Ships' whistles sounded. Among the Santa Isabella's crew, landing
preparations intensified.
Lowering the binoculars, Andrew stole a sideways glance at Celia. Like
himself, she was bronzed and healthy, a consequence of almost six months
of leisure, spent largely in the open air. She was relaxed too, he could
see, as he thought of the accumulated tensions that had preceded their
departure. No doubt about it: their tour, the comparative isolation and
a total absence of pressures had been good for them both.
He raised the binoculars again.
"You seem to be looking for something," Celia said.
Without turning his head, he answered, "If I see it, I'll tell you."
"All right." She sighed. "I can hardly believe it's almost over."
And it was. Their long journey, which had taken them through fifteen
countries. essentially would finish here. After a brief stopover they
would fly directly home from Honolulu, ready to resume their lives amid
whatever changes awaited them, though such changes would be mainly those
affecting Celia.
She wondered what they might be.
Deliberately, since leaving home in early March, she had excluded
thoughts of the future from her mind. Now it was midAugust and the future
must be faced.
Touching Andrew's arm, she said, "For the rest of my life I'll remember
this time; all the places we've been, everything we've done and seen . . ."
Celia thought: There was so much to remember. In her mind, scenes flooded
back: Yes, truly magic moonlight on the Nile, and sand and searing heat in
the Valley of the Kings . . . walking the labyrinthine cobbled streets of
Lisbon's Alfama, nine centuries old, and flowers everywhere . . .
Jerusalem-"The hill nearest heaven, where a man can cup his hand to the
wind and hear the voice of God. " . . . Rome's paradoxical mingling of the
earthy and ethereal . . . Greek islands, diamonds in the Aegean, a montage
memory of dazzling light, white terraced villages, mountains, olive groves
. . . Oil-rich, thriving Abu Dhabi and a happy reunion with Celia's younger
sister, Janet, her husband and young family . . . India, subcontinent of
savage contrasts, its pleasures weighed against appalling filth and
degradation. One picture-postcard scene: Jaipur, the pink city . . . Then
the Great Barrier Reef, Australian coral kingdom, a snorkeler's Fantasia .
. . and near Kyoto, Japan: the fragile, dreamlike beauty of the Shugakuin
Imperial Villa, an emperor's hideaway and a place of poetry, still guarded
from the tourist mainstream . . . Hong Kong's frenetic pace, as if time
were running out, and so it wasl . . . In Singapore-amid enormous
wealth-the humble hawker food stalls, a gourmet's paradise, with nasi
beryani served at Glutton's Corner, aptly named . . .
In Singapore, too, Andrew and Celia had boarded the Santa Isabella for an
unhurried journey through the South China Sea and into the Pacific, a
journey which was ending in Hawaii, here and now.
There had been twenty or so other passengers aboard, most of them savoring
the leisurely shipboard pace and comfortable accommodations without the
hectic, organized jollity of a conventional cruise ship.
As the cargo liner continued moving slowly, Celia's musing drifted on . .
.
Despite her conscious efforts at the exclusion, until now, of thoughts
about the future, inevitably there had been some about the past. In recent
days especially she had asked herself. was she wrong in quitting
Felding-Roth so abruptly? Her resignation had been impetuous and
instinctual. Had it also been unwise? Celia wasn't sure, and that thought
made her wonder whether sometime soon
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she would experience regrets and anguish even greater than her present
doubts.
Clearly her departure had not affected the company or the drug Montayne in
any serious way. In February, as scheduled, Montayne was launched,
apparently with great success. According to tradepress reports which Celia
read before leaving with Andrew on their tour, Montayne was at once widely
prescribed and popular, especially with women who continued to be employed
during pregnancy and to whom relief from morning sickness was critically
important. It seemed obvious that the new drug was a bonanza for
Felding-Rotb.
Similarly, she had learned while in France that the same was proving true
for the French originators of Montayne, Laboratoires Gironde-Chimie.
The France-Soir news stories out of Nouzonville and Spain, it seemed, had
not harmed the reputation of Montayne. Nor, in the United States, had Dr.
Maud Stavely's anti-Montayne arguments been given much credence or impeded
sales.
Celia's thoughts turned back to the ship, which was close to the dockside
now, approaching Pier 10 where they would disembark and clear Customs.