Dead End

Home > Mystery > Dead End > Page 7
Dead End Page 7

by Brian Freemantle


  ‘The idea’s scrapped.’

  ‘I’m to do this totally alone?’

  ‘No. I’m your check. You initiate and confirm. I repeat the experiment and doubly confirm.’

  ‘I’ve your word the idea will be abandoned if there is the remotest risk?’

  ‘I am not going to put you at risk, myself at risk or the company at risk,’ guaranteed Newton.

  ‘And I’d see the results of your separate analyses and tests?’

  ‘Of course.’

  ‘Thank you, for the salary increase.’

  ‘It’s nothing you don’t deserve.’

  Eight

  The Dubette computer printers were predictably the fastest state-of-the-art available but it still took almost five hours completely to download the full development schedules and each set of individually attached research procedures, in addition to the separate material covering the original production of those listed that were in the course of improvement or refinement. Ted Lapidus, finally facing Parnell over battlements of piled paper, said: ‘It’ll take five years, optimistically, to examine it all. We’ve just been avalanched.’

  That awareness had come to Parnell halfway through the print run. He said: ‘I got what I asked for. Now we’ve got to dig ourselves out.’ He was conscious of looks quickly exchanged between Lapidus and Deke Pulbrow. Identifying both he said: ‘OK, you two …’ He turned to Easton. ‘… And you, Mark. Work from the provided dates and from what’s identified as the most current research. At the moment you’re speed reading. I want you to create a priority agenda with which we can potentially and most productively get involved, the research that’s being giving the most time and attention, with no obvious financial constraints. Relegate anything you’re unsure of to secondary or third lists …’ He went to the Japanese. ‘Let’s go with your original instinct, Sean. Stay with hepatology …’ Parnell encompassed the stacked paper. ‘Sort out from all this anything genetically applicable to hepatitis B or C. Again, you’re speed reading, flagging up where we could go forward. Log and cross-reference separately liver carcinoma …’ He looked around them all. ‘That’s a general instruction. We’re going to create our own dedicated cancer programme: in time we’ll subdivide and specify, but before we even do that we’ll take on board everything that Rome and Canberra have already done and are maybe currently doing, because according to Benn, both Italy and Australia are actively working on melanoma research …’

  ‘And then there were three?’ broke in Beverley Jackson.

  Her smile took away any impatience in the remark. It was an easy smile and for the first time Parnell realized its slight unevenness lacked the sculpted dentistry of Rebecca’s. The realization that he was consciously comparing the two women surprised him, although Rebecca had virtually invited it when he’d told her of Beverley coming into the department, demanding with feigned jealousy a detailed description and claiming the day after they were supposed to begin work that she’d lingered in the commissary, to see the woman for herself, and declaring Beverley to be very sexy. Properly and fully concentrating upon the other geneticist for the first time, Parnell acknowledged that she was extremely attractive, fuller-breasted but smaller featured than Rebecca and maybe taller by an inch or two. He thought the darkness of their matching, deeply auburn hair was about the same, but Beverley wore hers practicably short. Concentrating even more, he saw Beverley didn’t have any freckles, either. From her application CV, Parnell knew that Beverley Jackson was divorced, although she’d kept her married name and still wore what he presumed to be her wedding ring. Looking between the woman and Peter Battey, he said: ‘And we’re the three. We’ll work dates again. We won’t initially go back further than two years into the improvement and re-evaluation of what Dubette already manufacture. We can work on what went before as and when. I won’t have a schedule imposed upon us. We’ll work at our speed, no one else’s …’ He smiled apologetically at Kathy Richardson. ‘The bulk of the recording work is going to fall upon you, I’m afraid. You’ll be the person creating the files.’

  ‘That’s what I came here expecting to do,’ smiled the woman.

  ‘You actually think we were avalanched!’ frowned Lapidus.

  ‘I got what I asked for,’ repeated Parnell. ‘And I was warned of the volume.’

  ‘And as you’ve already made clear, we’re going to have to work for our acceptance,’ reminded Beverley.

  ‘If we’re working nucleotide polymorphism acceptances, we’re going to need a lot of animals,’ said Peter Battey.

  ‘Something else for you, Kathy, when we establish a schedule,’ said Parnell.

  ‘I’m going to be a real busy person,’ accepted the secretary.

  Which is what they all set out to be, impressing Parnell by how quickly they came together as a cohesive unit. Unasked and unprompted, everyone worked late and frequently missed lunch or ate sandwiches at their benches. Parnell’s fitness regime flagged and he put on 2 lbs in three weeks, even though he was missing lunch too. There were two consecutive weekends when he didn’t stay over at Bethesda with Rebecca, and she didn’t stay in his apartment at all during the second week. She didn’t once complain, insisting she knew how important it was to him.

  Parnell adhered strictly to Dwight Newton’s demands and sent detailed memoranda to the research and development vice president, with copies to Russell Benn, satisfied that he was avalanching them in return and passingly curious at the lack of response from either scientist. During the second week he actually crossed into Benn’s section but was told the man could not be disturbed in the secure laboratory in which he was working. All Parnell’s exchanges, each identified by number and content, were acknowledged the following day. Newton’s replies came the day after that.

  Parnell insisted everyone take the third full weekend off and was glad when Rebecca announced she’d prefer to cook in at Bethesda on the Saturday night. They had drinks on the deck and he fell asleep in the colonial wicker chair when she went into the kitchen to prepare the meal. She woke him in mock protest that if he was as tired as that he wasn’t going to be much use to a girl as denied as she had been.

  ‘I was just recovering my strength.’

  ‘How much longer do you think you’re going to have to work like this?’

  Parnell shrugged. ‘A long time.’

  ‘You won’t be able to keep up the pace. The other guys are going to get pissed off.’

  ‘They’re working their asses off at the moment.’

  ‘You’ve got to cut some them some slack.’

  ‘I’ll watch it.’ He paused. ‘I’m surprised at Newton – Benn too, for that matter – by his apparent lack of interest after all the bullshit about knowing everything I’m doing.’

  ‘They’re too busy,’ said Rebecca. She grinned, conspira-torially. ‘And I think I know why.’

  ‘You promised to back off!’

  ‘I don’t think I did!’

  ‘I think you did.’ She’d cooked pot roast and Parnell realized that in his annoyance he was facing her across the table with his knife and fork held upright, like weapons. He put them down, pouring wine for them both.

  ‘I didn’t go around asking any more questions,’ said Rebecca, defensively.

  ‘What then?’

  ‘I had coffee in the commissary with the filing clerk in Benn’s section: she’s the girl I deal with all the time. And she said Benn’s locked himself away in a laboratory and no one knows what he’s doing.’

  ‘And you’re surmising it’s the great French mystery!’

  ‘It all fits, doesn’t it?’

  ‘No,’ refused Parnell. ‘You’re making it fit. And I want you to let it go. It’s becoming an obsession.’

  ‘It’s not an obsession! I’m just curious.’

  Parnell looked at her suspiciously. ‘You spoken to Paris again?’

  ‘Not about this.’

  ‘So you have spoken to Paris!’

  ‘A regular samples shipment we
nt missing. I had to confirm the waybill number.’

  ‘By phone!’

  ‘Why not?’ The defensiveness was back.

  ‘When? Before or after coffee in the commissary with the file clerk?’

  ‘The day after. But it was a coincidence, believe me.’

  Parnell didn’t. ‘And all you talked about was a missing samples shipment and a waybill number?’

  ‘There’s a lot of curiosity in Paris, too. Their top guy wouldn’t have been called to New York if it wasn’t important, would he?’

  ‘You said anything more to Showcross?’

  ‘He knew I called Paris. And why. By reconfirming the waybill number, I was able to track down the samples.’

  ‘I want a solemn promise that you’ll keep to this time. I want you to stop.’

  ‘Why’s it such a big thing with you?’ Rebecca demanded, showing her own irritation.

  ‘Because I think it is approaching an obsession. Whatever the French thing is, it’s something they’re keeping under wraps. Which is entirely logical and understandable in a pharmaceutical company whose whole existence and future is based on exactly that, keeping as totally controlled and secret as possible what might be an advance. The way you’re behaving you could far too easily become suspected of being a competitor informant. And if that happens, you’re out.’

  ‘So?’

  ‘Where do you think you’re going to work next, with that albatross around your neck? You’d be an untouchable pariah, never trusted. Nor in pure science, even if you could get a place.’

  Rebecca remained looking at him for several moments, her barely eaten meal abandoned, her wine glass untouched. Finally she said: ‘You really meant all that, didn’t you? About protecting me … and stuff …?’

  ‘Yes, I really mean it!’

  She went back to her wine glass like a clairvoyant studying a crystal ball. ‘Does that mean we’re moving on, into a commitment?’

  ‘You’re the resident judge of that – it’s your chosen word.’

  Rebecca remained engrossed in her glass for several more moments. Then she said, crack-voiced: ‘It sounds like it is.’

  ‘You’re the judge,’ repeated Parnell. Was that what he was offering, a commitment? He didn’t think the conversation had started out in that direction. He pushed aside his own, now cold, pot roast, which wasn’t anyway an American speciality he liked.

  ‘I just delivered the judgement.’

  ‘You don’t sound very sure about it.’

  ‘It wasn’t supposed to come out that way … like … oh shit …!’ she stumbled.

  ‘You any idea where we’re going with this?’

  ‘No.’ Rebecca’s voice was now mouse-like.

  Parnell wasn’t sure about anything: about how they’d stumbled into this quicksand in the first place. ‘Now we’ve got this far, beyond the refusal, why don’t we wait a while, decide what we both want?’

  ‘OK,’ accepted Rebecca, mouse-voiced still.

  ‘That was quite a loop.’

  She smiled, uncertainly. ‘I guess it was.’

  ‘And now we’re back at the beginning.’

  ‘I’ve almost forgotten what that was.’

  ‘No you haven’t. No more spy games, OK?’

  ‘I keep saying that.’

  ‘Say it again.’

  ‘OK.’

  ‘Mean it. Don’t commit professional suicide over some stupid non-mystery.’

  Rebecca opened her mouth to speak but stopped. ‘I won’t say OK one more time. I promise. But this time I really, really mean it. I’ll forget about France.’

  ‘Good.’

  ‘I know I shouldn’t be, but I feel … I don’t know … embarrassed, I guess … now that we’ve …’ She floundered to a halt. ‘What do you feel?’

  Parnell only just stopped himself from saying OK, which wouldn’t have been right in any context. ‘I feel you and I have got to talk a lot and laugh a lot and, in our own time, without any hurry or pressure, decide a lot.’

  ‘You don’t like pot roast, do you?’

  ‘It’s not my favourite.’

  ‘We’re deciding already.’

  Parnell supposed taking pot roast off the menu was a start.

  Irrationally Parnell felt uncomfortable taking the weekend off, and compensated by getting to McLean around six every morning the following week, and on the Wednesday ran for the elevator that was taking Russell Benn to their shared floor.

  ‘Sorry. Didn’t mean to frighten you,’ apologized Parnell, surprised at the medical research director’s startled reaction to his door-thrusting arrival. ‘I had to wait more than five minutes for a car to come back yesterday.’

  ‘Not used to people this early,’ said the black professor, recovering.

  ‘This your usual time?’ asked Parnell.

  ‘Varies,’ said the man. ‘Usually try to make an early start.’

  ‘Came across the other day. But you were busy.’

  ‘I’m still going through your stuff. Look forward to talking about it.’

  ‘You on to something new?’ asked Parnell.

  ‘What?’

  ‘What you’re working on. I was told you couldn’t be interrupted. Which I understood.’

  Benn made an awkward, arm-lifting gesture. ‘Seemed a possibility. Doesn’t appear to be working out.’

  ‘What?’ demanded Parnell, directly.

  There was a hesitation. ‘It’s a respiratory thing: a chest-muscle relaxant. Like I said, doesn’t seem to be working out on mice trials.’

  ‘We going to get a look at it on our side of the fence?’

  ‘I’m not getting anywhere, so it looks like a no-no. I would have thought you’ve got enough with what we’ve given you.’

  ‘Always room for more.’ The man was lying, Parnell knew.

  Nine

  Dwight Newton observed the previous protocol, catching the first New-York-bound flight from Washington and entering the corporate building on Wall Street using the unobserved, code-controlled penthouse elevator intentionally shielded from CCTV range. As before, Edward C. Grant was there ahead of him, waiting on the other side of the overpowering desk.

  ‘You’ve finished the tests?’ demanded the hunched, diminutive man, not bothering with any formal politeness.

  ‘That’s for you to decide,’ said Newton. Knowing there was no possibility of lunch, he’d got up in time for the maple-syruped waffles that never added weight to his skeletal frame, but he had hoped for coffee. There wasn’t any.

  ‘And?’

  ‘We added all the French-recommended colouring and flavouring to a slew of their products: linctus, cough medicines, bronchitis and asthma treatments, analgesics – most of their range. Tests on mice and monkeys showed no adverse reaction whatsoever.’

  ‘You telling me we can go ahead?’ smiled Grant.

  ‘The French also experimented with liulousine, so we did too. It would add a good twenty per cent on to any pirating cost. Again, nothing adverse in any animal trial. Because it’s in the same classification, we went further and introduced our beneuflous: that would hike the copying cost up to thirty per cent: there’s no indigenous source, so both liulousine and beneuflous would have to be imported …’

  ‘They’d be buying beneuflous – our drug – to pirate us!’ sniggered Grant.

  ‘It would be more cost-effective to copy other manufacturers, which I thought was the strategy we’re trying to set up,’ said Newton. ‘But if they chose to use our formulae, then yes, they’d have to buy our drugs to manufacture their copies of our drugs!’

  ‘I like it. I like it very much. No bad reactions at all?’ There was always a near-orgasmic feeling at the thought of making money.

  ‘None.’

  ‘What are liulousine and beneuflous?’

  ‘Expectorants.’

  ‘So, you’re signing the whole thing off as safe! We can go ahead?’

  ‘Paris hasn’t tested on humans. Neither have we.’
/>   ‘I thought mice were comparable and compatible enough?’ questioned the non-medical president.

  ‘There could be minimal variations. We – or France – should test on human volunteers to be one hundred per cent sure.’

  ‘We’re talking Africa, not civilization.’

  Dwight Newton, who’d believed himself beyond any reaction to anything Grant might say or do, was momentarily shocked into silence. ‘You know the three-phase testings,’ he managed.

  ‘Every preparation we’re talking about has gone through the French testing schedule and conforms to their licensing regulations,’ insisted Grant.

  ‘What about these additions?’

  ‘Georges Mendaille doesn’t anticipate any difficulty. Neither does Saby, providing none of it is sold on the domestic market.’

  Once again Newton had to pause before speaking. ‘How can that be explained to the licensing authorities?’

  ‘Rifofludine,’ said Grant, shortly, having rehearsed the moment.

  ‘The French-recommended flavouring?’ queried Newton.

  ‘Saby described it as a preservative in hot climates.’

  ‘It would have helped if I’d spoken to Saby when he was here! I didn’t test for that!’ It was the nearest Newton had ever come to confronting the president, and his stomach lurched as he spoke.

  ‘You can test now, can’t you?’ said Grant, sharply.

  ‘What else did Saby claim?’

  ‘That the colouring agent is a total placebo.’

  ‘But very practicable among people who have difficulty reading or comprehending, but who can understand differences in colours?’ anticipated Newton. He felt physically nauseous.

  ‘Exactly!’ agreed Grant, enthusiastically. ‘We could even get some public health recognition for this.’

  He’d sold his soul to a man who was beyond imagination or parody, Newton realized. At once he wondered why it had taken him this long to realize it. ‘I need to make the heat test on rifofludine.’

  ‘Saby says it’s OK.’

  ‘I’m signing it off, right?’

  ‘Right.’

  ‘Then I should confirm the experiment and its result. As I should test upon human volunteers.’

 

‹ Prev