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
prejudicial, inflammatory, unsubstantiated statement."
"So many big words!-okay, I withdraw it," Birdsong volunteered before the
commissioner could rule. He grinned. "I guess my honest feelings got the
better of me."
O'Brien looked as if be would object again, then decided not.
As Birdsong and others were well aware, the last exchange would be in the
record, despite withdrawal. Also, reporters at the press table had
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their heads down and were writing busily-something they were not doing
earlier.
Still observing from his spectator's seat, Nim thought: No doubt Davey
Birdsong's comments would be featured in reports next day because the p &
lfp leader was, as usual, making colorful copy.
Among the press group Nim could see the black reporter, Nancy Molineaux.
She had been watching Birdsong intently, not writing but sitting upright
and unmoving; the pose emphasized her high cheekbones, the handsome if
forbidding face, her slim, willowy body. Her expression was thoughtful. Nim
guessed that she too was appreciating Birdsong's performance.
Earlier today Ms. Molineaux and Nim had passed each other briefly outside
the bearing room. When he nodded curtly she raised an eyebrow and gave him
a mocking smile.
Birdsong resumed his questioning. "Tell me, Eric old pal . . . oops, pardon
me!-Mister Humphrey-have you ever heard of conservation?"
"Of course."
"Are you aware there is a widespread belief that projects like Tunipah
would not be needed if you people got behind conservation seriously? I
mean, not just played at conservation in a token way, but sold it-with the
same bard sell you're using right now in trying for permission to build
more plants to make fatter and fatter profits?"
O'Brien was halfway to his feet when Humphrey said, "I'll answer that." The
lawyer subsided.
"In the first place, at Golden State Power & Light we do not try to sell
more electricity; we used to, but we haven't done that kind of selling in
a long time. Instead we urge conservation-very seriously. But conservation,
while helping, will never eliminate steady growth in electrical demand,
which is why we require Tunipah."
Birdsong prompted, "And that's your opinion?"
"Naturally it's my opinion."
"The same kind of prejudiced opinion which asked us to believe you don't
care whether Tunipah makes a profit or not?"
O'Brien objected. "That's a misrepresentation. The witness did not say be
didn't care about profit."
"I'll concede that." Abruptly Birdsong swung to face O'Brien, his body
seeming to expand as his voice rose. "We know all of you at Golden State
care about profits-big, fat, gross, extortionate profits at the expense of
small consumers, the decent working people of this state who pay their
bills and will be stuck with the cost of Tunipah if . . ."
The remainder of the words were drowned in cheers, applause and
foot-stomping from the spectators. Amid it all, the commissioner banged his
gavel, calling, "Order! Order!"
A man who had joined in the cheering and was seated next to Nim
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observed Nim's silence. He inquired belligerently, "Don't you care,
buster?"
"Yes," Nim said. "I care."
Nim realized that if this were a regular court proceeding the chances
were that Birdsong would long since have been cited for contempt. But he
wouldn't be, now or later, because the courtroom setting was a fagade.
Hearings of this kind were allowed, deliberately, to operate loosely with
occasional disorders tolerated. Oscar O'Brien had explained the reasons
at one of his advance briefings.
"Public commissions nowadays are seared shitless that if they don't allow
all and sundry to have an unrestricted chance to say their piece, later
there could be challenges in the courts on grounds that significant
evidence was quashed. If that happened it might mean an overturned
decision, undoing years of work because some nut was ordered to shut up
or a minor argument disallowed. No one wants tbat-including us. So, by
general consent, the demagogues and kooks et al are given their head
along with all the time they want. It makes for dragged out bearings but
in the end is probably shorter."
That, Nim knew, was why the experienced administrative law judge had
shaken his head a few moments ago, advising the young commissioner not
to disallow Birdsong's disputed question.
Something else O'Brien had explained was that lawyers like himself, who
were involved on behalf of applicants, raised fewer objections at this
type of hearing than they would in court. "We save them for something
that's outrageously wrong and ought to be corrected in the record." Nim
suspected that O'Brien's objections during J. Eric Humphrey's
cross-examination by Birdsong were mostly to mollify Humphrey, O'Brien's
boss, who had been reluctant to make this appearance anyway.
Nim was sure that when his own turn came to testify and be cross-ex-
amined, O'Brien would leave him pretty much to fend for himself.
"Let's get back," Davey Birdsong was continuing, "to those huge profits
we were talking about. Now take the effect on consumers' monthly bills
. . ."
For another half hour the p & lfp leader continued his interrogation. He
employed leading, loaded questions unsubstantiated by facts, interrupted
by clowning, but hammering home his contention that profits from Tunipah
would be excessive and were the major motivation. Nim conceded mentally:
While the charge was false, the Goebbels-type repetition was effective.
Undoubtedly it would receive prominence in the media, and probably
credence, which clearly was among Birdsong's objectives.
"Thank you, Mr. Humphrey," the commissioner said when the GSP & L
chairman stepped down from the witness stand. Eric
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Humphrey nodded an acknowledgment, then departed with evident relief.
Two other GSP & L witnesses followed. Both were specialist engineers.
Their testimony and cross-examination were uneventful but occupied two
full days, after which the hearing was adjourned until Monday of the
following week. Nim, who would have the burden of presenting the main
thrust of GSP & L's case, would be next on the witness stand when
proceedings resumed.
9
Three weeks ago, when Ruth Goldman startled Nim by announcing her
intention to leave home for a while, he considered it likely she would
change her mind. However, Ruth hadn't. Now, on Friday evening, during the
weekend recess of the Tunipab hearings, Nim found himself alone in their
house, Leah and Benjy having been taken by Ruth to their grandparents
across town before her departure. The arrangement was that both children
would remain with the Neubergers until Ruth's return, whenever that might
be.
Ruth had been vague about that, just as she had declined to say where she
was going, or with whom. "Probably it will be two weeks, though it may
be less or more," she had told Nim several days ago.
But there was nothing vague about her attitude toward him; it had been
cool and definite. It was, he thought, as if she bad reached decisions
within herself and all that remained was to implement them. What the
decisions were, and how he would be affected, Nim had no idea. At first
be told himself he should care, but was saddened to find he didn't. At
least, not much. That was why he had raised no protest when Ruth told him
her plans were complete and she would be leaving at the end of the week.
It was uncharacteristic, Nim realized, for him merely to "go along" and
let things drift. By nature he was accustomed to make decisions promptly
and to plan ahead: that ability, applied to his work, had earned him
recognition and advancement. But where his marriage was concerned he
still had a curious reluctance to move, perhaps to face reality. He was
leaving it all to Ruth. If she chose to leave permanently and afterward
seek a divorce, which seemed the natural sequence, he would be
disinclined to fight or even try to dissuade her. However, he would not
take the step himself. Not yet.
He had asked Ruth only yesterday if she was ready to discuss their
.z52
situation, remembering her words: ". . . you and I have only been going
through the motions of being married. We haven't talked about it. But I
think we should. . . Perhaps when I come back."
Why wait? Nim reasoned.
But she had answered in a businesslike tone, "No, I'll tell you when I'm
ready." And that had been the end of it.
Leah and Benjy entered frequently into Nim's thoughts along with the
possibility of divorce. Both children, he knew, would be devasted by the
idea, and he was saddened at the thought of them being hurt. But the fact
was, children survived divorces and Nim had observed many who accepted
a divorce in the family as a simple facet of life. Nor would there be
difficulty about Nim and Leah and Benjy spending time together. He might
even end up seeing more of both children than be did now. It had happened
to other estranged fathers.
But all that must await Ruth's return, he reflected, as he roamed the
empty house on Friday evening.
A half hour ago he had telephoned Leah and Benjy, plowing through the
objections of Aaron Neuberger, who didn't like his telephone to be used,
except for emergencies, on the Sabbath. Nim had let the phone ring and
ring until his father-in-law gave in and answered. "I want to talk to my
kids," Nim insisted bluntly, "and I don't care if it's Mickey Mouse
Tuesday."
When Leah came on the line a few minutes later she reproached him gently.
"Daddy, you've upset Grandfather."
Nim had felt like saying Good! but wisely didn't, and they talked about
school, a forthcoming swim meet and ballet class. No mention of Ruth. He
sensed that Leah knew something was wrong but was uneasy about asking or
knowing.
His conversation with Benjy, which followed, revived the irritation Nim
frequently felt about his in-laws.
"Dad," Benjy had said, "am I going to have a bar mitzvah? Grandfather
said I have to. And Grandmother says if I don't I'll never be a real
Jewish man."
Confound those interfering Neubergers! Couldn't they just be loving
grandparents, taking care of Leah and Benjy for a couple of weeks,
without grabbing the chance to inject propaganda into the children? It
was almost indecent to start working on them with such baste, as well as
intruding on the rights of Nim and Ruth as parents. Nim bad wanted to
bring up that subject himself with Benjy, talking it over quietly,
intelligently, man-to-man, not have it sprung on him suddenly like this.
Well, an inner voice inquired, why didn't you do it? There's been plenty
of time. If you had, you wouldn't be wondering right now how to respond
to Beniy's question.
Nim said sharply, "No one has to have a bar mitzvah. I didn't. And what
your grandmother said is nonsense."
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"Grandfather says there's a lot I'll have to learn." Benjy still sounded