Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
"Of course, the question we're all asking is: How soon will we get FDA
approval?"
There was a silence during which Celia sensed Sam hesitating, then he
said, "For the moment, this is confidential between you and me. But I can
say positively we will get FDA permission, and very soon."
"May I ask why you're so sure?"
"No.,'
"Okay." If Sam wanted to be mysterious, Celia thought, that was his
privilege, though between the two of them she could see no reason for it.
She asked, "Is everything good with Juliet?"
"And with my soon-to-be grandchild?" Sam chuckled. "I'm delighted to say,
yes."
Three months ago, Juliet and Dwight Goodsmith had happily announced
Juliet's pregnancy. The baby was due in January.
"Give Lilian and Juliet my love," Celia said, "and tell Juliet that with
her next pregnancy she'll be able to take Montayne."
"Will do. Thanks, Celia." Sam hung up.
While Celia was on the telephone, Andrew had gone into the bathroom to
shower, then dress, prior to a thirty-five-mile drive to Palo Alto where
they were due for dinner with Lisa and several newfound Stanford friends.
During the drive and the dinner, which was relaxed and cordial, neither
Celia nor Andrew referred to their argument at the hotel. At first there
was a coolness between them, but it disappeared as the evening
progressed. By that time, also, Celia had decided to leave well alone and
not raise the subject of Montayne with her husband again. After all,
everyone in the course of a lifetime had occasional mental blind spots
and-though it disappointed herthis was clearly one of Andrew's.
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Sam Hawthorne, replacing the telephone after his Boonton-San Francisco
conversation with Celia, found himself wishing he had not made the
impulsive, positive statement he had concerning FDA approval of Montayne. It
was unwise and indiscreet. Why had he done it? Probably for no other reason
than the human one of seeking to impress another person-in this case Celia.
He must watch himself, he decided. Especially after his discussion an hour
ago with Vincent Lord and the decision they had reached jointly. It was a
decision that could have disastrous repercussions if it were found out,
though it must not be--ever. All the more reason, then, to let the FDA's
approval of Montayne, when it happened, seem natural and ordained. As it
should have been, and would have been, except for that arrogant,
insufferable, criminal bureaucrat at FDA I
It was sheer bad luck that the new drug application for Montayne had drawn
Dr. Gideon Mace as the reviewer.
Sam Hawthorne had not met Mace, and didn't want to. He had heard more than
enough about the man from Vince Lord and others, and about the trouble Mace
caused Felding-Roth, first with the unreasonable delay two years ago over
Staidpace, and now with Montayne. Why should people like Mace possess the
power they had, Sam fumed, and have to be endured by honest businessmen who
sought, from the Maces of this world, no more than equal honesty and
fairness?
Fortunately, people like Mace were a minority-at FDA a small minority; Sam
was certain of that. Just the same, Mace existed. He was currently sitting
on the Montayne NDA, using regulations, procedural tactics, to delay it.
Therefore a way to circumvent Gideon Mace had had to be found.
Well, they had a way. At least, Felding-Roth had, in the person of Vince
Lord.
Originally, when Vince had collected-no, make that bought-
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evidence of criminality by Dr. Mace, purchased it with two thousand
dollars of Felding-Roth cash, the voucher for that cash now buried deep
in the travel expense account where auditors or the IRS would never find
it . . . at that time Sam had been angry, critical of Vince, and shocked
at the thought that the material might ever be used in the way which Vince
envisaged.
But not now. The existing situation affecting Montayne was too critical,
too important, for that kind of scruples anymore. And that was another
cause for anger. Anger because criminals Re Mace begat criminality in
others-in this case, in Sam and Vincent Lord -who had to use those same
low-grade tactics for reasonable selfdefense. Damn Macel
Still soliloquizing silently, in the quietness of his office, Sam told
himself. A penalty you paid for appointment to the top job in any large
company was having to make unpalatable decisions authorizing actions
which, if they happened elsewhere or in a vacuum, you would consider
unethical and disapprove of, But when you shouldered responsibilities
involving so many people, all of them dependent on you-shareholders,
directors, executive colleagues, employees, distributors, retailers,
customers-it was necessary at times to swallow hard and do what was
needed, however tough, unpleasant or repugnant it might seem.
Sam had just done that, an hour ago, in okaying a proposal by Vincent
Lord to threaten Dr. Gideon Mace with exposure and therefore criminal
charges if he failed to expedite the approval of Montayne.
Blackmail. No point in mincing words or hiding behind euphemisms. It
would be blackmail, which was criminal too.
Vince had laid his plan bluntly in front of Sam. Equally bluntly Vince
declared, "If we don't make use of what we have, putting pressure on
Mace, you can forget any idea of marketing Montayne in February, and
maybe for another year."
Sam had asked, "Could it really be that long-a year?"
"Easily, and more. Mace has only to ask for a repeat of-"
Lord stopped as Sam waved him to silence, canceling an unnecessary
question, remembering how Mace had delayed Staidpace for longer than a
year.
"There was a time," Sam reminded the research director, "when you talked
of doing what you're proposing without involving me."
"I know I did," Lord said, "but then you insisted on knowing where that
two thousand dollars went, and after that I changed my
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mind. I'll be taking a risk and I don't see why I should take it alone. I'll
still handle the frontline attack, the confrontation with Mace. But I want
you to know about it, and approve."
"You're not suggesting we have anything in writing?"
Lord shook his head negatively. "That's another chance I'll take. If it
came to a showdown, you could deny this conversation ever happened."
It was then Sam realized that what Vince really wanted was not to be
lonely, not to be the only one to know what he was going to do. Sam
understood that. Loneliness was something else you experienced at the cop,
or near the top, and Vince was simply sharing his.
"All right," Sam said. "Much as I dislike myself for it, I approve. Go
ahead. Do what we have to." He added facetiously, "I assume you're not
wired for sound."
"If I were," Lord answered, "I'd incriminate myself as well as
YOU."
When the ncsearch director was on his way out, Sam called after him.
"Vince!"
Lord turned. "Yes?"
"Thanks," Sam said. "Just thanks, that's all."
So all that was necessary now, Sam reasoned, was to wait. Wait, just
briefly, with confidence that FDA's approval of Montayne would come
quickly, inevitably, soon.
Since their previous encounter, Vincent Lord was aware, some changes had
occurred in Dr. Gideon Mace. The FDA official looked older, which he was,
but also better than before, which was surprising. His face was less red,
the nose veins seemed less prominent. He had shed the shabby suit and
bought a new one, also new glasses, so he no longer squinted. His manner
seemed easier and, while still not friendly, was certainly less brusque and
not aggressive. Perhaps one reason for the changes-a reason Vincent Lord
had learned about through his contacts at the agency-was that Mace had
stopped drinking and joined Alcoholics Anonymous.
Apart from Mace personally, other things were the same or worse. The FDA
Washington headquarters was the same impersonal, shabby beehive. In the
cupboardlike office where Mace was seated at his desk there was more paper
than ever; it was piled high everywhere, like a rising flood tide. Even
crossing the floor one had to step around paper and files, put there for
lack of any other space.
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Gesturing about him, Lord asked, "Is our Montayne NDA here somewhere?"
"Parts of it," Mace said. "I haven't room for it all. Montayne is what
you've come about, I suppose."
"Yes," Lord acknowledged. He was seated, facing the doctor, and even now
hoping there might be no need to use the photostatic copies that were in
a briefcase at his feet.
"I'm genuinely worried about that Australian case." Again in contrast to
the past, Mace's tone was reasonable. "You know the one I mean?"
Lord nodded. "The woman in the Outback. Yes, the case went to court where
it was thrown out, and there was also a government inquiry. Both times
the accusations were checked out thoroughly, and Montayne absolved."
"I've read all that stuff," Mace said, "but I want more details. I've
written to Australia for them, and when they come I may have still more
questions."
Lord protested, "But that could take months!"
"Even if it does, I'll be doing what I'm here for."
Lord made one last try. "When you held up our NDA for Staidpace, I
assured you it was a good drug, free from adverse side effects and
so-despite the unnecessary delay-it was. Now I'm promising you, based on
my reputation as a research scientist, exactly the same is true of
Montayne."
Mace said stolidly, "It's your opinion, not mine, that the Staidpace
delay was unnecessary. In any case, that has nothing to do with
Montayne."
"In a way it has," Lord said, knowing he now had no alternative, glancing
behind him to be sure the outer door was closed. "It has, because I think
what you are doing,to us at Felding-Roth relates not to our latest NDA,
but to your own state of mind. You have a lot of personal problems which
are getting the better of you, creating unfair prejudices, clouding your
judgment. Some of those personal problems have come to my company's
attention."
Mace bridled and his voice sharpened. "What the hell are you talking
about?"
"This," Lord said. He had the briefcase open and extracted papers. "These
are brokerage transaction slips, canceled checks, bank statements, and
other items which show you made over sixteen thousand dollars illegal
profit, utilizing confidential FDA informa-
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tion concerning two generic drug companies, Binvus Products and Minto Labs."
Lord added the dozen sheets or so to the paper clutter already on Mace's
desk. "i think you should look these over carefully. I'm aware you've seen
them all before, but it may be news to you that someone else has copies.
And by the way, these are copies of copies. Keeping or destroying them will
do no good."
It was obvious that Mace recognized instantly the top itern--one of the