Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
always know where you stand."
"I'm already nervous about our meeting."
He laughed. "No need to be. I predict you'll like each other."
It was a Friday evening in July and the two of them were in Martin's house
at Harlow, into which Yvonne had moved completely almost a year before. She
abandoned her small apartment because it seemed a needless expense.
In the living room at this moment, books and papers were spread around-a
clutter from Yvonne's studies for "A" level exams, now six months away. A
year and a half had passed since, at Martin's urging, she had taken on the
heavy work load which eventually, they hoped, would launch her into
veterinary medicine.
The studying had gone well. Yvonne, loving what she was doing, had never
been happier. Her joy pervaded the household and was shared by Martin. As
well as continuing to work at the FeldingRoth Research institute by day,
she was having outside tutoring during some evenings and weekends.
Martin-as he had promised -helped Yvonne, supplementing her learning with
his practical experience.
Another reason for pleasure was progress at the institute. Since the
devastating "animal-rights" raid, the reassembly of data had gone far
faster than expected. Now, not only was all of it recovered, but
development of Peptide 7 had advanced to the point of being ready for a
management product review.
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Celia, along with several others from New Jersey, would arrive at Harlow
for that purpose on Wednesday of the next week.
At this moment, however, thoughts of Celia were a digression. Martin
continued to frown, as he had for several minutes, over a textbook-Murray's
Principles of Organic Chemistry.
"They've rewritten this since I studied it for my degree. Some of the new
stuff is unrealistic. You'll learn it, then ignore it afterward."
Yvonne asked, "You're talking about those systematic chemical names?"
"Of course."
The Geneva system for chemicals had been devised by the Inter
national Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, abbreviated to
IUPAC and pronounced "U-pak." The idea was that the name of
any chemical compound should also indicate its structure. Thus,
iso-octane became 2,2,4-trimethylpentane, acetic acid --- common
vinegar-was ethanoic acid, and ordinary glycerin, propane-1,2,3
triol. Unfortunately, chemists who were supposed to use the
IUPAC names seldom did, though examiners required them. Thus
Yvonne was learning the new names for the exams, the old for
future lab work.
She asked, "Don't you use IUPAC names in the lab?"
"Not often. Most of us can't remember them; also they're unwieldy. Anyway,
let me test you on both."
"Go ahead."
Successively, Martin called off twenty chemicals, sometimes using the old
name, with others the newer code. Each time, without hesitating, Yvonne
recited the alternate.
Martin closed the book, shaking his head. "That memory of yours still
amazes me. I wish I had one like it."
"Is my memory why you won't let me take Peptide 7?"
"That's part of it. Mostly, though, I don't want you running any risks."
A month ago, Martin had posted a notice at the institute. It was headed:
Volunteers Wanted.
The notice requested that any staffers who were willing to have Peptide 7
injected into them, for the first series of tests on healthy humans, should
sign their names below. The objectives and potential risk were carefully
spelled out. Before posting the notice, Martin signed himself.
Rao Sastri signed immediately after. Within a few days there were fourteen
more signatures, including Yvonne's.
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From the final list, Martin chose a total of ten volunteers. Yvonne was
not among them. When she inquired about her omission, he put her off
with, "Perhaps later. Not yet."
The purpose of the early human testing was not to study positive results
from Peptide 7, but to look for any harmful side effects. As Martin
explained to Celia by telephone at the time, "We're allowed to do this
kind of testing in Britain on our own, though in America you'd need
approval from the FDA."
So far, after twenty days' monitoring of the volunteers, who continued
to receive daily doses of Peptide 7, there had been no visible side
effects whatever. Martin was delighted, though knowing that much more
human testing needed to be done.
Yvonne sighed, "I'd like to have some Peptide 7 soon. It's probably the
only way I'll ever take my extra weight off. By the way, I bought us
kippers for tomorrow."
Martin beamed and told her, "You're an angel." Kippers were his favorite
breakfast on weekends, when he could take time to enjoy them.
His voice became more serious. "I'm going to see my mother tomorrow. I
talked to my father today and he told me the doctors say she hasn't
long."
While the deterioration of Martin's mother had been slow, the progression
of her Alzheimer's disease had been relentless. A few months earlier,
Martin had had her moved into a Cambridge nursing home where she now
floated dimly on the outer edge of life. Martin's father eontinued to
live in a small but pleasant flat that Martin had rented for his parents
soon after joining Felding-Roth.
"I'm sorry." Yvonne reached out, touching his hand in sympathy. "Yes,
I'll come. If you don't mind my studying in the car."
They arranged to leave immediately after breakfast. Martin wanted to stop
at his office, briefly, on the way.
Next morning at the institute, while Martin glanced through mail and read
a computer printout from the day before, Yvonne wandered into the animal
room. He found her there later.
She had paused in front of a cage containing several rats and Martin
heard her exclaim, "You horny old devil!"
He asked, amused, "Who is?"
Yvonne turned, then pointed to the cage. "This bunch are some of the
homiest little beasts I've ever seen. Just lately, they can't
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seem to get enough of each other. They'd sooner have sex than eat. "
While Martin watched, the rat over whom Yvonne had exclaimed continued
copulating with a submissive female, while another pair in an adjoining
cage amused themselves likewise.
He glanced at typed descriptions on both cages. All the rats, he noted,
were receiving the most recent, refined batch of Peptide 7.
"You said they were horny 'just lately.' What does that mean?"
Yvonne hesitated, then looked sharply at Martin. "I suppose . . . since
they've been getting their injections."
"And they're not young rats?"
"If they were human, they'd draw old-age pensions."
He laughed and said, "It's probably coincidence." Then he wondered, was
it?
As if reading his mind, Yvonne asked, "What will you do?"
"On Monday, I'd like you to check the breeding rate of rats which have
had Peptide 7. Let me know if it's average, or above."
"I don't have to wait until Monday. I can tell you now, it's way above
normal. Up to this moment, though, I didn't connect-"
Martin said sharply, "Don't connect! Assumptions can lead down false
alleys. Just send me what figures you have."
She said submissively, "All right."
"After that, set up two new groups of male and female older rats. Keep
the groups separate, but let each group cohabit. One group will receive
Peptide 7, the other won't. I want a computerized study of the mating
habits of both."
Yvonne giggled. "A computer won't tell you how many times
"I suppose not. But it will keep track of litters. We'll settle for that.
"
She nodded, and Martin sensed that her mind was on something else. He
asked, "What is it?"
"I was thinking about a funny thing that happened yesterday. While I was
buying those kippers. Mickey Yates is one of your volunteers, isn't he?"
"Yes." Yates, a lab technician, was the oldest of the Peptide 7
volunteers. He had gone out of his way to be helpful to Martin ever since
the incident, several years earlier, involving Celia and the guillotined
rat. Being in the testing program was Yates's latest contribution.
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"Well, I saw his wife in the market and she said how good it was that
Mickey's work was making him feel young again."
"Meaning what?"
"I asked her. So she went red and said nowadays Mickey was feeling so
'bouncy and energetic'-those were her words-he was keeping her busy in
bed."
"Did she mean just recently?"
"I'm sure of it."
"And he hadn't before?"
"According to her, hardly ever."
"I'm amazed she'd talk about it."
Yvonne smiled. "You don't know women very well."
Martin was thoughtful, then he said, "Let's get in the car. We'll talk on
the way to Cambridge."
At first, while driving, they listened to the news on the radio, which was
mostly of politics. It was an exciting, optimistic time in Britain. Two
months earlier, a general election had brought to power the first woman
prime minister in British history. Now, Margaret Thatcher and her
government were injecting new enterprise into a nation which had suffiered
from too little of it since World War II.
At the end of the news, Martin switched off the radio and returned to
closer concerns.
"I'm worried," he said, "and I don't want any general talk about what we've
discussed this morning. You're to keep to yourself what you told me about
those rats breeding. Also, don't tell anyone else about the new study. We
have to do it, even though I don't like the idea, but keep the results
locked up until you give them to me. And no more stories about Mickey Yates
and his wife."
"I'll do all of that," Yvonne said. "But I don't understand why you're
worried."
"Then I'll tell you. It's because we've produced a drug which I hope will
be significant, be taken seriously, and become an important disease
fighter. But if word gets around that it's some kind of aphrodisiac-as well
as inducing weight loss, which may or may not be good after all-it could be
the worst thing to happen. It would throw everything we've done into
disrepute, could make us look as if we reinvented snake oil."
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"I think I understand," Yvonne said. "And now you've explained it, I won't
talk. But it'll be hard to stop others."
Mar-tin said grimly, "That's what I'm afraid of
It was midmorning when they reached Cambridge. Martin drove directly to the
nursing home where his mother was being cared for. She was in bed, which
was where she spent most of her time, having to be lifted out when
necessary. She remembered nothing, not even the simplest things, and-as had
been the case for many yearsgave no flicker of recognition when Martin came
close.
His mother, Martin thought as he stood with Yvonne beside him, seemed
visibly to be wasting away day by day. Her body was emaciated, cheeks
gaunt, hair thinning. Even in the earlier declining years-around the time