Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
marks on her face from the animals when she was opening some of those
cages."
Martin put his arm around Yvonne. "Let's get out of here. There's nothing
to be gained by talking to these people."
As they left, they heard the inspector ask, "Now how about being
reasonable, and giving me the names of those others with you?"
"Go screw yourself, copper," the woman said.
Bentley had followed Martin and Yvonne. He told them, "Those two will go
to jail."
Yvonne said, "Oh, I hope so."
"They will," the administrator assured her. "And they'll join others from
that Animal Rescue Army who are there already because of other raids like
this. The whole bunch see themselves as martyrs. I've read a lot about
them. Supposedly they have hundreds of followers around the country." He
added, glumly, "I'm sorry. I should have foreseen this."
"None of us could have," Martin said. He sighed. "Tomorrow we'll start
cleaning up and see what's left."
7
The dispiriting task of assessing damage at the Harlow research institute
took several days. At the end, Martin estimated that the "animal- rights"
raid had caused a iwo-year setback.
From the ashes of a burned pile of papers and other records outside the
building, some assorted material was salvaged, but not much. Later, Nigel
Bentley reported to Martin, "Those nut cases apparently knew what they
were looking for, and where everything was. That means they had inside
help which, according to the po-
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lice, fits the pattern of other raids they've made. What they do, I'm told,
is persuade people like cleaners and maintenance staff to become informers.
I'll try to find out who were our Judases, though I haven't much hope."
Bentley was also putting into effect strong and expensive security
precautions for the future. As he expressed it, "In a way, it's an exercise
in stable-door shutting, but those self-righteous people don't give up
easily and could be back."
Martin, in turn, reported to New Jersey by telephone the day after the
raid. He talked with Celia Jordan. A few days earlier Martin had been
delighted to learn of Celia's return to the company; now he expressed
regret that their first conversation should involve bad news.
Celia was shocked to learn of the Harlow devastation-so much in contrast to
the recent heady progress reports concerning Peptide 7. She questioned
Martin sharply about his estimate of delay.
"What we'll have to do," he advised her, "is repeat all the animal
experiments to recover our data, which will be needed, of course, to
accompany any drug application the company eventually makes. It's a
terrible time waste and cost, but there isn't any choice."
"Are you sure about two years?"
"That's the worst case. If we can shave a few months from that time, we
will. We know a great deal more than we did two years ago, and some
shortcuts may appear. We'll all do our best."
"I want you to know," Celia said, "that Peptide 7 has become tremendously
important to us here. Do you remember a conversation you and I had at your
home? When you said that given more time, you'd produce an important
medication which could make Felding-Roth enormously rich? Those last two
words were yours."
At the Harlow end of the line, Martin grimaced. "I'm afraid I do remember.
I wasn't behaving like a scientist, and I hope that conversation doesn't go
further than the two of us."
"It won't. But I remind you of it because the first part of your prediction
came true. Now we desperately need the rest."
"Two years to get back where we were," Martin repeated. "Shortcuts or no,
it won't be much less."
But the conversation spurred him to hasten reorganizing. Replacement
animals were ordered promptly from supply houses, and as they arrived the
institute staff commenced the tiresome rote of repeating work begun long
ago. As a result, within thrre weeks the data recovery process was moving
at full speed.
349
Through the entire ordeal, from the night of the raid onward, Yvonne
sustained Martin in body and spirit. She took total charge of his domestic
life, asking him nothing, doing everything, so that neither his attention
nor energy was diverted from the institute. At other times she comforted
him, seeming to know instinctively when to be silently attentive or, at
other moments, to amuse him with cheerful chatter. Once, after an
especially grueling day, she told him at bedtime to lie face down, and when
he did, gave him a slow Swedish massage which sent him into a deep sleep
that lasted until morning.
When Martin asked next day how she learned to do such things, she answered,
"I once roomed with a friend who was a masseuse. She taught me."
"I've noticed something about you," he said. "You never miss a chance to
learn. The same way you did by working at John Locke. Have you read any
more from him lately?"
"Yes." Yvonne hesitated, then said, "I found something he wrote which kind
of fits those 'animal-rights' people. About enthusiasm."
Martin said curiously, "I'm not sure I remember. Can you find the passage?"
Locke's Essay was across the room, but without bothering to get it, Yvonne
began:
"Immediate revelation being a much easier way for men to
establish their opinions and regulate their conduct than the
tedious and not always successful labor of strict reasoning, it is
no wonder that some have been very apt to pretend to revela
tion, and to persuade themselves that they are under the pecu
liar guidance of heaven in their actions and opinions . . ."
As she recited, obviously from memory, Martin regarded her with
astonishment. Observing him, she stopped, blushed slightly, then continued.
"Their minds being thus prepared, whatever groundless
opinion comes to settle itself strongly upon their fancies is an
illumination from the Spirit of God and presently of divine
authority; and whatsoever odd action they find in themselves a
strong inclination to do, that impulse is concluded to be a call
or direction from heaven . . ."
Yvonne stopped, giggled, then said with embarrassment, "That's enough."
350
"No, no!" Martin urged, "Go on, please! If you can."
She said doubtfully, "You're making fun of me."
"Not in any slightest way."
"All right." She recited again.
". . . enthusiasm, which, though founded neither on reason
nor divine revelation, but rising from the conceits of a warmed
or overweening brain . . . men being most forwardly obedi
ent to the impulses they receive from themselves . . . For
strong conceit, like a new principle, carries all easily with it,
when got above common sense, and freed from all restraint of
reason . . . "
Yvonne concluded the passage, then stopped, those blue, innocent-appearing
eyes fixed on Martin, making clear she was still wondering about his
reaction, doubtful of herself
He said, his tone incredulous, "I do recall that quotation now. And I don't
believe you got a single word wrong. How did you do it?"
"Well . . . I remember things."
"Anything? And always in such detail?"
"I suppose SO."
It reminded Martin that even when reporting trivial gossip, Yvonne always
seemed to have the details right-names, dates, places, sources, background
facts. He had noted that subconsciously, but without significance until
now.
He asked, "How many times do you have to read something until you've
memorized it?"
"Once, mostly. But with Locke it was twice." Yvonne still looked
uncomfortable, as if Martin had uncovered a guilty secret.
He said, "I want to try something."
Going to another room, he found a book he was sure Yvonne had not seen
before. It was Locke's The Conduct of the Understanding. Opening it to a
page he had once marked, he told her, "Read this. From here to here."
"Can I read it twice?"
"Of course."
She put her head down, her long blond hair tumbling forward while she
frowned in concentration, then she lowered the book. Martin took it from
her and instructed, "Now tell me what you read."
He followed the words as she repeated them.
351
"There are fundamental truths that lie at the bottom, the
basis upon which a great many others rest, and in which they
have their consistency. These are teeming truths, rich in store,
with which they furnish the mind, and, like the lights of
heaven, are not only beautiful and entertaining in themselves,
but give light and evidence to other things, that without them
could not be seen or known. Such is that admirable discovery
of Mr. Newton that all bodies gravitate . . ."
She went on for several paragraphs more, Martin finding each word exactly
as printed in the book he held.
At the end, Yvonne pronounced, "That piece is beautiful."
"So are you," he told her. "And so is what you have. Do you know what it
is?"
Again that unease, the hesitation. "You tell me."
"You've a photographic memory. It's something special and unique. Surely
you must have known."
"In a way. But I never wanted to be different. Not a circus freak." There
was a break in Yvonne's voice. For the first time since he had known her,
Martin sensed tears not far away.
"Who, in God's name, ever said you were a freak?"
"A teacher at school."
Under Martin's tender questioning the story came out.
She had written an examination and, because of that photographic memory,
many of her answers were identical with material in textbooks. The woman
teacher who marked the paper accused Yvonne of cheating. Later, Yvonne's
denial was disbelieved. In desperation she had given an example of
memorizing similar to the one Martin just witnessed.
The teacher, angry at being proved wrong, had scoffed at Yvonne's
ability, describing her as a "circus freak" and her kind of learning as
"worthless."
Martin interrupted. "It isn't worthless if you understand what you've
learned."
"Oh, I did understand."
"I believe that," he assured her. "You've a good brain. I've seen it
function."
But after her clash with the teacher, Yvonne not only concealed her gift,
she attempted to discard it. When studying, she consciously tried not to
memorize sentences and phrases and, in part, succeeded. But doing so also
lessened her understanding of what
352
she was required to learn, with the result that she did poorly in
examinations and failed the one that might have got her into veterinary
college.
"Teachers can do a lot that's good," Martin said. "But stupid ones can
do great harm."
Yvonne, looking sad as she remembered, said nothing, and a silence
followed during which Martin concentrated, thinking.
At length he said, "You've done so much for me. Maybe, for a change, I