Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Industries, #Technology & Engineering, #Law, #Mystery & Detective, #Science, #Energy, #Public Utilities, #General, #Fiction - General, #Power Resources, #Literary Criticism, #Energy Industries, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Fiction, #Non-Classifiable, #Business & Economics, #European
mother, the Greek movie actress who bad supplied him with a steady income
for twenty years, had apparently hit hard times herself; she wasn't
getting film parts any more because not even makeup could conceal the
fact she was fifty, her young goddess looks gone forever. That part
Georgos was delighted about and hoped things would get progressively
worse for her. If she were starving, he told himself, he wouldn't give
her a stale biscuit. just the same, a notification from the Athens
lawyers-impersonal as usual-that no more payments would be made into his
Chicago bank account had co- me- ata fi-awk w-a-rd-tirrie.-
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Georgos' cash needs involved current costs and future plans. One project
was to build a small nuclear bomb and explode it in or near the
headquarters of Golden State Power & Light. Such a bomb, Georgos reasoned,
would destroy the building, the exploiters and lackeys in it, and also much
else around-a salutary lesson to the capitalist oppressors of the people.
At the same time, Friends of Freedom would become an even more formidable
force than now, to be treated with awe and respect.
The idea of creating an atomic bomb was ambitious and perhaps
unrealistic-though not entirely. After all, a twenty-one-year-old Princeton
student named John Phillips had already demonstrated in a muchpublicized
term paper that the "how to" details were available in library reference
materials to anyone having the patience to assemble them. Georgos Winslow
Archambault, steeped in physics and cbemistry, had obtained all the
information he could about Phillips' research and bad built up a file of
his own, also using library data. One nonlibrary item in the file was a
ten-page handbook put out by California's Office of Emergency Services and
directed to police agencies; it outlined ways of dealing with atomic bomb
threats and that, too, had provided useful information. Georgos was now
close, he believed, to creating a detailed working drawing. However, actual
construction of a bomb would require fissionable material, which would have
to be stolen, and that would take money-a lot, plus organization and luck.
But it just might be done; stranger things had happened.
He told Birdsong, "Since you've brought up time and money, we need some
long green now."
"You'll get it." Birdsong permitted himself a wide smile, the first since
coming in. "And plenty. I found another money tree."
3
Nim was shaving. It was shortly after 7 A.M. on a Thursday in late August.
Ruth bad gone downstairs ten minutes earlier to prepare breakfast. Leah and
Benjy were still sleeping. Now Ruth returned, appearing at the bathroom
door with a copy of the Chronicle-West.
"I hate to start your day off badly," she said, "but I know you'll want to
see this."
"T'hanks." He put down his razor and took the newspaper with wet
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hands, scanning the front page. Below the fold was a single-column item:
GSP & L
Rate Hike
Disallowed
Electricity and gas rates are not going up.
This was revealed yesterday afternoon by the California Public
Utilities Commission in announcing its turndown of an application by
Golden State Power & Light for a 13 percent increase in gas and
electric rates which would bring the giant utility another $58o million
annual revenue.
"We do not see the need for an increase at this time," the PUC stated
in a decision arrived at by a 3-2 vote of the commissioners.
At public bearings GSP & L had argued that it needs more money to
offset rising costs due to inflation and to raise capital for its
construction program.
High officials of GSP & L were not available for comment, though a
spokesman expressed regret and concern for the future energy situation
in California. However, Davey Birdsong, leader of a consumers
group-power & light for peoplehailed the decision as . . .
Nim put the newspaper on the toilet tank beside him while he finished
shaving; he had learned of the decision late yesterday so the report was
confirmation. When he went downstairs Ruth had his breakfast ready-lamb
kidneys with scrambled eggs-and she sat opposite him with a cup of coffee
while he ate.
She asked, "What does that commission decision really mean?"
He grimaced. "It means that three people, who got jobs because of
politics, have the right to tell big corporations like GSP & L and the
phone company how to manage their aff airs-and do."
"Will it affect you?"
"Damn right it will! I'll have to revamp the construction program; we'll
cancel or slow down some projects and that will lead to layoffs. Even
then there'll be a cash bind. Long faces this morning, especillly
Eric's." Nim cut and speared a kidney. "These are great. You do them
better than anybody."
Ruth hesitated, then said, "Could you get your own breakfast for a while,
do you think?"
Nim was startled. "Sure, but why?"
"I may be going away." In her quiet voice Ruth corrected herself. "I am
going away. For a week, perhaps longer."
He put down his knife and fork, staring across the table. "Why? Where?"
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"Mother will have Leah and Benjy while I'm gone, and Mrs. Blair will come
in as usual to clean. So it will just mean your having dinner out, and
I'm sure you can arrange that."
Nim ignored the barb. He insisted, his voice rising, "You didn't answer
my question. Where are you going, and why?"
"T'here's no need for either of us to shout." Beneath Ruth's composure
he sensed an uncharacteristic hardness. "I beard your question, but the
way things are between us, I don't believe I should have to answer. Do
you?"
Nim was silent, knowing precisely what Ruth meant: Why should there be
a double standard? If Nim chose to break the rules of marriage, have a
succession of affairs, and stay out many evenings for 'his own
diversions, why shouldn't Ruth exercise similar freedom, also without
explanations?
On that basis, her declaration of equality-which it clearly wasseemed
reasonable. just the same, Nim felt a stab of jealousy because he now was
sure Ruth was involved with another man. Originally be hadn't thought so;
now he was convinced, and while he knew that giveand-take arrangements
existed in some marriages, he found it hard to accept them in his own.
"We both know," Ruth said, interrupting his thoughts, "that for a long
time you and I have only been going through the motions of being married.
We haven't talked about it. But I think we should." This time, despite
an attempt at firmness, there was a tremor in her voice.
He asked, "Do you want to talk now?"
Ruth shook her head. "Perhaps when I come back." She added ' "As soon as
I work some things out, I'll let you know when I'm leaving.
Nim said dully, "All right."
"You haven't finished your breakfast."
He pushed the plate away. "I don't feel like eating any more."
Tbough the exchange with Ruth-jolting in its suddenness-preoccupied Nim
during his drive downtown, activity at GSP & L headquarters quickly
eclipsed personal thoughts.
The ruling of the Public Utilities Commission took priority over all
other business.
All morning a procession of executives from the utility's financial and
legal departments, their expressions serious, hastened in and out of the
chairman's office. Their comings and goings marked a succession of con-
ferences, each concerned with the essential question: Without any in-
crease whatever in the rates it could charge customers, how could GSP &
L carry out its needed construction plans and stay solvent? Tle
consensus: Without some drastic and immediate cutback in expenses, it
simply wasn't possible.
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At one point J. Eric Humphrey paced the rug behind his desk and demanded
rhetorically, "Why is it that when the price of bread goes up because of
inflation, or meat prices soar, or it costs more to get into a ball game
or a movie-no one is ever surprised and it's all accepted? But when we
point out, truthfully, that we can't produce electricity at our old rates
because our costs have gone up too, nobody believes us."
Oscar O'Brien, the general counsel, answered while he lit one of his
inevitable cigars. "They don't believe us because they've been condi-
tioned not to-mostly by politicians trying to suck up to voters and
looking for an easy target. Public utilities have always been one."
The chairman snorted. "Politicians! They disgust me! They invented
inflation, created it, worsened it, keep it going as they build public
debt -all so they can buy votes and bang onto their jobs. Yet those
charlatans, those obscurers of the truth, blame inflation on everybody
elseunions, business-anyone, anything, except themselves. If it weren't
for politicians, we wouldn't be asking for a rate increase because we
wouldn't need to."
Sharlett Underhill, executive vice president of finance and the fourth
person in the chairman's office, murmured, "Amen!" Mrs. Underhill, a tall
brunette in her forties, capable, normally unruffled, today appeared
harried. Which was understandable, Nim thought. Whatever financial
decisions were made as a result of the PUC turndown, they would
inevitably be harsh and Sharlett Underhill would have to implement them.
Eric Humphrey, who bad stopped his pacing, asked, "Does anyone have a
theory about why everything we sought was rejected? Did we misludge the
profiles? Where was our strategy wrong?"
"I'm not sure our strategy was wrong," O'Brien said. "And we sure as hell
studied the profiles, and acted on them."
Behind the question and answer was a common practice of utility
companies-but also a closely guarded secret.
Whenever a Public Utility Commissioner was appointed, companies which
would be affected by the new commissioner's decisions began a detailed
undercover study of the individual, including a psychiatric profile. The
resultant material was pored over by experts in psychology who searched
for prejudices to be guarded against or weaknesses to be exploited.
Later an executive of the utility would attempt to strike up a friendship
in the course of which the commissioner would be entertained at the
executive's home, invited to play golf, share bard-to-get seats at sports
events, or taken trout fishing at a Sierra hideaway. The entertainment
was always pleasant, private, and discreet, but never lavish. During
casual conversations some discussion might occur about the utility's
affairs, but no direct favors were asked; the influence was more subtle.
Often the tactic worked in a utility's favor. Occasionally it didn't.
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"We knew two of the commissioners would vote against us anyway," the
lawyer said, "and we knew for sure that two of the other three were in
our corner. So that left Cy Reid's as the swing vote. We'd worked on
Reid, we thought he'd see things our way, but we were wrong."
Nim knew about Commissioner Cyril Reid. He was a Ph.D. economist and