Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
said, "I think you'd better start at the beginning."
"All right. I will."
She sensed Seth organizing his thoughts and, while she waited, wondered why
he was calling, and not Sam Hawthorne.
"You remember the reports of damaged babies. Vegetable babies -that awful
word. The reports from Australia, France and Spain?"
:'Of course."
'There have been many more-from those countries and others. So many more,
there can't be any doubt Montayne has been the cause."
"Oh, my God!" Celia's free hand went to her face. Her shocked f
irst thought was: Don't let it be truel This is a bad dream and isn't
happening. I don't want to be proved right, not this awful way. Then she saw
Andrew through the open bathroom door, his face set
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grimly, and noticed the increasing light of dawn outside, and she knew
that what was happening was no dream, but real.
Seth continued, reciting details. ". . . began two and a half months ago
with some scattered reports . . . cases similar to those earlier ones .
. . then the numbers increased . . . more recently, a flood . . . all the
mothers had taken Montayne during pregnancy . . . nearly three hundred
defective births worldwide, so far . . . obviously more to come,
especially in the United States where Montayne has been on sale only
seven months . . ."
Celia closed her eyes as the tale of horror grew. Hundreds of babies who
could have been normal. but now would never think or walk, or sit up
unaided or, through their lifetimes, behave in any normal way . . . And
still more to come.
She wanted to weep bitter tears, to cry aloud in anger and frustration.
But whom to cry to? No one. And weeping and anger were ,useless and too
late.
Could she, herself, have done more to prevent this grisly tragedy?
Yesl
She could have raised her voice after resigning, gone public with her
doubts about Montayne, instead of keeping silent. But would it have made
any difference? Would people have listened? Probably not, though someone
might have, and if one baby had been saved, her elTort would have been
worthwhile.
As if reading her mind from five thousand miles away, Seth said, "All of
us here have asked ourselves questions, Celia. We've had sleepless,
conscience-ridden nights, and there isn't one of us who won't carry some
guilt to his grave. But your conscience can be clear. You did everything
you could. It wasn't your fault your warning was ignored."
Celia thought: It would be so easy and comfortable to accept that view.
But she knew that to the end of her days she would always have doubts.
Abruptly, a new and troubling thought occurred to her.
"Is everything you've told me, Seth, being made widely known? Is there
urgent publicity going out? Have there been warnings to women that they
should stop taking Montayne?"
"Well . . . not exactly in that form. There's been some scattered
publicity, though-surprisingly-not much."
That would account, Celia thought, for the fact that she and Andrew had
heard nothing adverse about Montayne while on their tour.
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Seth went on, "Apparently no one among the news people has pieced the
whole story together yet. But we're afraid it will happen soon."
"You're afraid
Obviously, she realized, there had been no attempt to create massive
publicity, which meant that Montayne was still being sold and used Again
Celia remembered Andrew's report yesterday; in quoting Tano he had spoken
of Montayne "selling like crazy." A shiver ran through her as she asked,
"What has been done about withdrawing the drug and recalling all
supplies?"
Seth said carefully, "Gironde-Chimie have told us they'll withdraw
Montayne in France this week. I understand the British are preparing an
announcement. And the Australian government has already stopped sales
there."
Her voice rose to a shout. "I'm talking about the United States."
"I assure you, Celia, we've done everything the law requires. Every bit
of information coming into Felding-Roth has been passed on promptly to
the FDA in Washington. Everything. Vince Lord attended to that
personally. Now, we're waiting for a decision from FDA."
"Waiting for a decision! In the name of God, why wait? What other
decision can there be but to withdraw Montayne?"
Seth said defensively, "Our lawyers advise us strongly that at this stage
it will be better to have the ruling from FDA first."
Celia was close to screaming. Holding herself in, she replied, "The FDA
is slow. Their machinery could take weeks."
"I suppose that's possible. But the lawyers insist-if we make the
withdrawal on our own, it could be an admission of error and therefore
of liability. Even now, the financial consequences . . ."
"What does finance matter when pregnant women are still taking Montayne?
When unborn babies - . ."
Celia stopped, realizing that argument was useless, that the conversation
was going nowhere, and wondering again why she was talking with the
comptroller and not Sam Hawthorne.
She said decisively, "I must speak with Sam."
"Unfortunately, that isn't possible. At least, not now." An uneasy pause.
"Sam is . . . well, not himself. He has some personal problems. That's
one of the reasons we want you-need youback."
Celia snapped, "Double-talk. What does it mean?"
She heard a long, deep sigh.
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"I was going to tell you this later because I know it will distress you."
Seth's voice was low and sad. "You remember . . . just before you left
us, Sam had a grandchild."
"Juliet's baby. Yes." Celia recalled the celebration in Sam's office in
which she had shared, though she dampened it later with her doubts about
Montayne.
"It seems that when Juliet was pregnant, she suffered a good deal from
morning sickness. Sam gave her Montayne."
At Seth's last words, Celia went icy cold. She had a horrible foreboding
of what was coming next.
"Last week the doctors established that Juliet's baby was adversely
affected by the drug." Seth's voice was close to breaking. "Sam's
grandson is mentally defective and has limbs that won't function-a
vegetable like all the others."
Celia emitted a strangled cry of grief and anguish, then incredulity
replaced it. "How could Sam have done it? At that time Montayne wasn't
approved for use."
"There were physicians' samples, as you know. Sam used them, telling no
one except Juliet. I suppose he had so much faith in Montayne, he assumed
there was no risk. There was some personal involvement too, and maybe
pride. If you remember, Sam acquired Montayne himself from
Gironde-Chimie."
"Yes, I remember." Celia's thoughts were whirling-a m6lange of
frustration, anger, bitterness and pity. Seth interrupted them.
"I said we need you, Celia, and so we do. As you can imagine, Sam is torn
with grief and guilt and, at the moment, isn't functioning. But that's
only part of it. Everything here is a mess. We're like a damaged,
rudderless ship, and we need you to assess the damage and take charge.
For one thing, you're the only one with sufficient knowledge and
experience. For another, all of us-including the board-respect your
judgments, especially now. And, oh yes, you'd come back as executive vice
president. I won't go into the financial arrangements, but they'd be
generous."
Executive vice president of Felding-Roth. Only one rung below the
presidency, and higher than she would have been as vice president of
sales, the promotion she had forfeited by resigning. There was a time,
Celia thought, when the offer just made would have been a cause for
rejoicing, a shining landmark in her life. How strange that suddenly it
meant so little.
"You may have guessed," Seth said, "that some others-a few
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members of the board-are with me, listening to this conversation. We're
waiting here, hoping your answer will be yes."
Celia became aware of Andrew signaling to her from the batbroom. For the
second time since the conversation began, she said into the telephone,
"Wait, please."
Andrew hung up the extension and came out. As before, with her phone
mouthpiece covered, she asked him, "What do you think?"
He told her, "You'll have to make the decision. But remember this: If you
go back, it won't matter that you resigned and have been away. Some of the
Montayne mess and responsibility will rub off on you."
"I know." She considered. "But I was with the company a long time. They
were good years, and now they need me. I'll only go back, though, if . . ."
She returned to the phone.
"Seth, I've listened carefully to what you've said. I will accept, but
under one condition."
"Name it."
"Montayne must be withdrawn from sale by Felding-Roth today, and a public
statement made about its dangers. Not tomorrow, not next week, and no more
waiting while the FDA makes up its mind. Today - "
"Celia, that's impossible. I explained the warnings from our lawyers, the
question of liability. We could be inviting millions of dollars' worth of
lawsuit&---enough to break the company."
"There'll be lawsuits anyway."
"We know that. But we don't want to make the situation worse. Withdrawal is
bound to happen soon. Meanwhile, with you here we could discuss it . . ."
"I don't want it discussed. I want it done. I want it on national TV and
radio today, and in every newspaper in the country within twenty-four
hours. I'll be watching and listening. Otherwise, no deal."
It was Seth's turn to say, "Just a moment."
Celia could hear a muted discussion at the other end. There was some
obvious dissension, then she heard Seth say, "She's adamant," and a moment
later, "Of course she means it. And remember, we need her more than she
needs us."
The debate in New Jersey continued for a few minutes more, most of it
inaudible to Celia. Finally, Seth returned to the phone.
"Celia, your terms are met. What you insist on will be done at
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once- -within the hour. I guarantee it personally. Now . . . how soon
can you be back?"
She told him, "I'll get the first flight out of here. Expect me in the
office tomorrow."
4
They managed to get four coach seats on a United Airlines 747, leaving
Honolulu at 4:50 P.m. The flight was a nonstop to Chicago, where they
would change to another flight due in New York at 9 A.M. local time the
following day. Celia intended to get what sleep she could en route, then
go to Felding-Roth headquarters that same morning.
Lisa and Bruce, who had planned to spend two more days in Hawaii, made
the decision to return east with their parents. As Lisa put it, "We
haven't seen you for so long, we want to be with you as much as we can.
Also, if I'm by myself I know I'll be sad, and probably cry, thinking
about those poor deformed babies."