Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
Palace with her own dear Martin, who was now waiting in an anteroom, ready
to be escorted in when the ceremony began. Already Martin had gone through
a brief rehearsal, guided by the Comptroller of the Household, a colonel
in dress uniform.
Suddenly a pause, a stir. The band stopped, its music ceasing in midflow.
All other activity halted. In the gallery, the bandmaster, his baton
poised, stood waiting for a signal. It came. As liveried footmen swung
double doors open, the Queen appeared.
The uniformed were at attention. All guests had stood. The baton swooped.
The national anthem, sweet yet strong, swelled out.
The Queen, in a turquoise silk dress, was smiling. She moved to the
center of the ballroom. Dutifully following were the Lord Chamberlain and
the Home Secretary, each in morning dress. The presentation of honors
began. The band played a Strauss waltz softly. All was dignified,
fast-moving and efficient. No wasted time, but not an occasion that those
involved were likely to forget.
Yvonne was storing every detail in her memory.
Martin's turn came soon, immediately following a Knight Commander of St.
Michael and St. George who took precedence in rank. Following
instructions, Martin entered, advanced three paces, bowed . . . forward
to a kneeling box . . . right knee on the box, left foot to the floor .
. . As Martin knelt, the Queen accepted a sword from an equerry and with
it touched Martin lightly on both shoulders. He rose . . . a half pace
to the right, one pace forward . . . With Martin standing, his head bowed
slightly, the Queen placed around his neck a gold medallion on a
red-and-gold ribbon.
The Queen had spoken briefly with each person being honored. With Martin,
Yvonne thought, more time was spent. Then, with three backward paces and
a bow, Martin was gone.
He joined Yvonne quietly a few minutes later, slipping into a seat beside
her. She whispered, "What did the Queen say?"
Smiling, he whispered back, "The Queen is a well-informed lady."
Yvonne knew that later she would find out exactly what the Queen had
said.
Yvonne's only disappointment was that she hadn't seen or met the Prince
and Princess of Wales. She had been told in advance that it wasn't likely
they would even be in the palace, but had hoped. One day, though, it
might happen. Now that she was marTied to Martin, anything could happen.
The only thing she was having trouble getting used to since the
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announcement of Martin's knighthood was being addressed as "my lady" by
Harlow and Cambridge people, including the head porter at Lucy Cavendish.
She'd asked him not to, but he insisted. Well, in time she supposed she'd
adjust to that and other things. After all, Yvonne thought whimsically,
quite soon there would be farmers calling for Lady Peat-Smith, veterinary
surgeon, to take care of their pigs and cows.
Celia and Andrew's reception and party at the Dorchester Hotel in honor of
Sir Martin and Lady Peat-Smith was a great success. It began at teatime,
went on until early evening, and during that time nearly a hundred people
came, including most of the Harlow institute's senior staff. Rao Sastri was
there; be was escorting Lilian, and they seemed to be having fun. Twice,
however, Celia saw them with their heads together, apparently engaged in
serious talk. Rao, Celia knew, was unattached; according to Martin, he had
never married.
Yvonne was looking lovely and radiant. She had lost weight and confided to
Celia that Martin had at last allowed her to take Peptide 7. For Yvonne, as
for others, the drug's antiobesity factor worked.
During the party Celia told Martin quietly, "Andrew and I are leaving
tomorrow, early. When this is over, I'd like the four of us to have a few
minutes by ourselves."
At last the celebration ended. With happy leave-takings, the guests
dispersed.
It was already dark when Celia, Andrew, Martin and Yvonne walked the short
distance from the Dorchester to Fortyseven Park. The February day had been
cold, but clear and invigorating. The clearness was persisting into night.
Now they were relaxed in the pleasant living room of the Jordans'
apartment.
fu,;'Martin," Celia said, "I'll come to the point because it's been a day and
I think we're all a little tired. As you know, FeldingRoth is building a
genetic engineering facility. It will be in New Jersey, not far from what
will be our new Morristown headquarters, and we're taking care that the labs
will have everything in them to gladden a genetic scientist's heart."
"I'd heard some of that," Martin said. "The quality of what you're doing is
already being talked about."
439
"What I'm leading up to," Celia continued, "is a question. Will you and
Yvonne come to live in the United States, and will you head our genetic
research as vice president and director of the new labs? I'd promise you
a free hand to follow whatever scientific direction you believe we
should."
There was a silence. Then Martin said, "It's a fine offer, Celia, and I'm
truly grateful. But the answer is no."
She urged, "You don't have to give an answer now. Why not take time to
think about it, and talk it over with Yvonne?"
"I'm afraid the answer's definite," Martin said. "It has to be because
I need to tell you something else. I wish I could have picked another
time, but here it is. I'm resigning from FeldingRoth."
The news shocked Celia. "Oh, no! That can't be true." Then she looked at
him sharply. "Are you going to another pharmaceutical company? Has
someone made a better offer? Because, if so-"
He shook his head. "I wouldn't do that to you. At least, not without
discussing it first. What I'm doing is returning to an old love."
"He means Cambridge, not another woman," Yvonne said. "We're going to
live there. The university is where his heart is."
And where I plucked him from before you knew him, Celia thought.
She had been unprepared for the news, but instinct told her there would
be no dissuading Martin, so she wouldn't try. Cambridge had called; he
had responded like a homing pigeon. Well, on a sunlit Sunday thirteen
years earlier, she had won a victory against the university. It had
proved a worthwhile victory all around. But time's wheel had spun; now
it was Cambridge's turn, and Celia and Felding-Roth had lost.
Andrew spoke, addressing Martin. "I always thought that academia might
call you back one day. Will you be master of a college? I read somewhere
that there are vacancies."
"There are," Martin answered, "but not for me. At forty-six I'm still
young for a mastership. Maybe when I'm older, grayer, more illustrious
. . ."
"Goodness!" Celia exclaimed. "How illustrious do you have to be? You've
had a major scientific breakthrough, accolades worldwide, a knighthood."
Martin smiled. "Cambridge has seen all those things many times.
440
The university is not easily impressed. No, I'm going in under something
called the 'New Blood Scheme.'"
It was a government-sponsored program, he explained, through which he
would become an assistant director of research in one of several new,
frontier areas of science. The salary in the new post, as was so often
the case in academia, would not be large-to begin, less than ten thousand
pounds a year. However, the Peat-Smiths would be comfortable because of
Martin's substantial Peptide 7 income, and he would undoubtedly use some
of it, he said, to supplement his department's research funds.
Several months earlier a settlement for Martin had been worked out by
Felding-Roth's financial officers and lawyers in New Jersey. The
arrangement had received Celia's approval and, later, the board's.
Under British law-the Patents Act of 1977-Martin could have applied for
a court award of compensation for his Peptide 7 discovery. But he hadn't
wanted to go to court, even amicably, nor had Felding-Roth. Therefore,
by agreement, an offshore trust fund of two million pounds had been set
up in the Bahamas from where money would flow to Martin regularly. The
fund was hedged around with legal moats and barriers so that Britain's
confiscatory taxation system would not, as Celia expressed it, "rob
Martin of his just reward."
That just reward, she now thought ruefully, had helped open the way back
to Cambridge. She suspected, though, that Martin would have made the same
decision whether the Peptide 7 money were available or not.
Before Martin and Yvonne left to drive home, Celia said, "Felding-Roth
will miss you both, but I hope the four of us will always stay close
friends."
They agreed they would.
Prior to Celia and Andrew's departure from Britain, one final matter was
arranged.
Several hours after Martin and Yvonne had gone, and close to the Jordans'
bedtime, there was a knock at the apartment door. It was Lilian
Hawthorne. Sensing that Lilian wanted to be alone with Celia, Andrew
discreetly disappeared.
"I'm glad you talked me into coming to England," Lilian said. "You may
have noticed that I've had a good time."
441
"Yes, I have," Celia said. She smiled. "I was pleased to see Rao enjoy
himself too."
"Rao and I have discovered that we like each other-and it may be even more
than that." The older woman hesitated. "I suppose you'll think, because all
of it has happened so quickly, and at my age, I'm being foolish . . ."
"I think nothing of the sort. What I do think is that it's time you had fun
again, Lilian, that you should enjoy life any way you want, and if that
includes Rao Sastri-fine!"
"I'm pleased you feel that way because it's about that I came to see you.
I want to ask a favor."
"If I can do it," Celia said, "I will."
"Well, Rao would like to come to America. He says he's wanted to for a long
time. I'd like it too, and if it were possible for him to work at
Felding-Roth . . ."
The sentence was left unfinished- Celia completed it. "It would be
convenient for you both."
Lilian smiled. "Something like that."
"I'm certain," Celia said, "that a place can be found in the new genetic
labs. In fact you can tell Rao I guarantee it."
Lilian's face lit up. "Thank you, Celia. He'll be delighted. He was hoping
for that. He knows he doesn't have the leadership qualities of someone like
Martin; he told me so. But he's a good support scientist-"
"I'm aware of that, which makes it easier," Celia said. "But even if he'd
been less than he is, I'd still have done it. You did me a big favor many
years ago, Lilian, my dear. This is a small one in return,"
The older woman laughed. "You're talking about that first moming we met?
When you came to the house-so young, so brashhoping I'd help you become a
detail woman, by influencing Sam?"
Then she stopped, a catch in her voice as, for both of them, so many
memories flooded back.
Early the following morning a chauffeured limousine conveyed Andrew and