Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
claimed or promised. All they wanted was sales. They'd guarantee any
result to get them."
Often, Celia went on, such nostrums and folk remedies were marketed by
families. It was some of the same families who opened early drugstores.
Later still, their descendants continued the family tradition and built
drug manufacturing firms which, as years went by, became big, scientific
and respectable. As it all happened, the crude early selling methods
changed and became more respectable too.
"But sometimes not respectable enough. One reason was that family control
persisted, and the old snake-oil, hard-sell tradition was in the blood."
"Surely," Andrew observed, "there can't be many families left that
control big drug companies."
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"Not many, though some of the original families control large blocks of
stock. But what has persisted, even with paid executives running the
companies, is the out-of-date, less-than-ethical hard sell. Much of it
happens when some detail men call on doctors to tell them about new
drugs."
Celia continued, "As you know, some detail men-not all, but still too
many-will say anything, even lie, to get doctors to prescribe the drugs
they're selling. And although drug companies will tell you officially
they don't condone it, they know it goes on."
They were interrupted by a stewardess announcing they would land in New
York in forty minutes, the bar would be closed soon, and meanwhile would
they like drinks? Celia ordered her favorite, a daiquiri, Andrew scotch
and soda.
When the drinks were served and they had settled down again Andrew said,
"Sure, I've seen examples of what you were talking about. Also I've heard
stories from other doctors-about patients being ill or even dying after
taking drugs, all because detail men gave false information which the
doctors believed." He sipped his scotch, then went on, "Then there's drug
company advertising. Doctors are deluged with it, but a lot of the
advertising doesn't tell a physician what he ought to know--especially
about side effects of drugs, including dangerous ones. The thing is, when
you're busy, with patients to see and a lot of other problems on your
mind, it's hard to believe that someone from a drug company, or the com-
pany itself, is deliberately deceiving you."
"But it happens," Celia said. "And afterward it's swept under the rug and
nobody will talk about it. I know, because I've tried to talk about it
at Felding-Roth."
"So what's your plan?"
"To build a record. A record no one can argue with. Then, at the proper
time, I'll use it."
She went on to explain.
"I won't be calling on you any more, Andrew; that's company policy, so
someone else from Felding-Roth will be covering your office and Dr.
Townsend's. But whenever you have a detail manor woman-visit you, from
our company or any other, and you discover you're being given wrong
information, or not warned about side effects of a drug or anything else
you should be told, I want you to write a report and give it to me. I
have some other doctors doing the same thing, doctors who trust me, in
Nebraska as well as New Jersey, and my file is getting thick."
42
Andrew whistled softly. "You're taking on something pretty big. Also some
risks."
"Someone has to take risks if it's. to improve a bad situation. And I'm not
afraid."
"No," he said, "I don't believe you ever would be."
"I'll tell you something, Andrew. If the big drug companies don't clean
house themselves, and soon, I believe the government will do it for them.
There are rumblings in Congress now. If the drug industry waits for
congressional hearings, and then new laws with tough restrictions, they'll
wish they'd acted first on their own."
Andrew was silent, absorbing what he had just learned and mulling other
thoughts. At length he said, "I haven't asked you this before, Celia, but
maybe now is a good time for me to understand something about you."
His wife's eyes were fixed on him, her expression serious. Andrew chose his
words carefully.
"You've talked about having a career, which is fine by me, and I'm sure you
wouldn't be happy without it. But I've had the impression, while we've been
together these past weeks, that you want more out of a career than what
you're doing now-being a saleswoman."
Celia said quietly. "Yes, I do. I'm going to the top."
"Right to the top?" Andrew was startled. "You mean head up a big drug
company?"
"If I can. And even if I don't get all the way to the top, I intend to be
close enough to have real influence and power."
He said doubtfully, "And that's what you want? Power?"
"I know what you're thinking, Andrew-that power can be obsessive and
corrupting. I don't intend to let it be either. I simply want a full life,
with marriage and children, but also something more, some solid
achievement."
"That day in the cafeteria . . ." Andrew stopped, correcting himself. "That
memorable day. You said it was time for women to do things they haven't
done before. Well, I believe that too; it's already happening in a lot of
places, including medicine. But I wonder about your
industry-pharmaceuticals. That whole business is conservative and
male-oriented-you've said so yourself."
Celia smiled. "Horribly so."
"Then is it ready yet-for someone like you? The reason I'm asking, Celia,
is that I don't want to watch, and see you hurt or
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unhappy, while you throw everything into the effort and then maybe it
doesn't work out."
"I won't be unhappy. I'll promise you that." She squeezed Andrew's arm.
"It's new for me to have someone care as much as you do, darling, and I
like it. And as for your question-no, the industry isn't ready yet, for me
or any other women with strong ambition. But I have a plan."
"I should have known you'd have it all figured out."
"First," Celia told him, "I intend to make myself so good at my job that
Felding-Roth will discover they can't afford not to promote me.,,
"I'd bet on that. But you said 'first.' Isn't that enough?"
Celia shook her head. "I've studied other companies, their histories, the
people who run them, and discovered one thing. Most of those who make it to
the top get there on someone else's coattails. Oh, don't misunderstand
me-they have to work hard, and be excellent. But early on they select some
individual-a little higher up, usually a bit older-who they believe is en
route to the top ahead of them. Then they make themselves useful to that
person, give him their loyalty, and follow along behind. The point is: when
a senior executive gets promoted, he likes someone he's used to, who is
capable and whom he can trust, coming up behind."
"At this point," Andrew asked, "have you picked someone to follow?"
"I decided some time ago," Celia said. "It's Sam Hawthorne."
"Well, well!" Her husband raised his eyebrows. "One way or another, Sam
seems to loom large in our lives."
"In business matters only. So you've no need to be jealous."
"All right. But does Sam know about this decision-that you're hitching to
his star?"
"Of course not. Lilian Hawthorne does, though. We've discussed it
confidentially and Lilian approves."
"It seems to me," Andrew said, "there's been some womanly plotting going
on."
"And why not?" For a moment the inner steel 'of Celia flashed. "Someday all
that may not be needed. But right now the corporate business world is like
a private men's club. So a woman must use whatever means she can to become
a member and get ahead."
Andrew was silent, considering, then he said, "Until now I hadn't thought
about it a lot; I guess most men don't. But what you say makes sense. So
okay, Celia, while you're making your way to
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the top-and I truly believe you just might-I'll be behind you, all the
way."
His wife leaned over in her seat and kissed him. "I knew that all along.
It's one of the reasons I married you."
They felt the airplane's engines moderate in tempo and the "Fasten Seat
Belts" sign came on. Through windows on the port side the lights
ofManhattan shimmered in early evening darkness. "In a few minutes," a
stewardess announced, "we will be landing at Idlewild International
Airport."
Again Celia reached for Andrew's hand.
"And we'll be starting our life together," she said. "How can we miss?"
5
On returning to their separate jobs, Andrew and Celia discovered they had
each, in differing ways, achieved celebrity status.
Like many important medical developments, the news about Andrew's
successful use of Lotromycin took time to circulate but now, some six
weeks after Mary Rowe's remarkable recovery, it had been picked up by the
national press.
Morristown's tiny Daily Record had carried the story first under a
heading:
Local Medic Uses Wonder Drug
Patient's "Miracle" Recovery
The Newark Star-Ledger, which clearly scanned the local papers in its
bailiwick, repeated the item which, in turn, came to the attention of
science writers at the New York Times and Time. When Andrew returned he
discovered that urgent phone messages had been left for him to call both
publications, which he did. Still more publicity resulted, with Time, the
more romantically inclined, adding to its report the fact of Andrew and
Celia's marriage.
As well as all this, the New England Journal of Medicine informed Andrew
that, subject to certain revisions, his article on
45
Lotromycin would be p.~blished in due course. The suggested revisions were
minor and Andrew agreed to them at once.
"I don't mind admitting I'm consumed with envy," Dr. Noah Townsend
observed when Andrew told him about the New England Journal. Then
Andrew's senior partner added, "But I console myself with the luster it's
already bringing to our practice."
Later, Townsend's wife Hilda, attractive in her early fifties, confided
to Andrew, "Noah won't tell you this, but he's so proud of you that
nowadays he's thinking of you like a son-the son we'd both have liked but
never had."
Celia, while receiving less personal publicity, found her status at
Felding-Roth changed in not-so-subtle ways.
Previously she had been an anachronism, to some a source of curiosity and
amusement-the firm's sole saleswoman who, despite an initial and
unexpected accomplishment in Nebraska, still had to prove herself over
the long term. Not any more. Her handling of Lotromycin, and the
continuing publicity which delighted FeldingRoth, had put both the drug
and Celia squarely on the road to success.
Within the company her name was now well known to top executives,
including Felding-Roth's president, Eli Camperdown, who sent for Celia
a day after her return to work.
Mr. Camperdown, a lanky, cadaverous industry veteran in his mid-sixties,