Syndrome Part 40
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"You don't look so bad yourself."
"G.o.d, it seems like a lifetime ago when we went to our separate corners," he said after another long, contemplative pause. Then he stepped in and she closed the door. He didn't try to peck her cheek, for which she looked relieved. "Tell me how you're doing, really."
"You really want to know? Okay, this afternoon I had a heavy-duty heart checkup. n.o.body wants to put odds on this thing, but my condition is getting worse." She led him through to the living room.
"Then we should talk," he said looking around. "I love your loft, by the way. You make me envy you. You should see the makes.h.i.+ft quarters I live in. I'm sort of waiting for my s.h.i.+p to come in."
"The truth is, Stone, that I no longer know the first thing about you or your life. And I think I'd like to."
" 'Had we but world enough, and time.'" He smiled "We'll get around to the catching up, but I don't flatter myself that you asked me down at this hour to reminisce about our respective pasts."
"You've already got me figured out." She made a face. "I don't know whether I like that or not. By the way, would you care for something?
You used to like scotch, right?"
"The operative part of that statement is 'used to.' These days I try to avoid anything harder than beer. I was starting to have an ethanol dependency problem. I think it's a common occupational hazard for a reporter."
"I don't keep beer around. It's fattening. How about some diet cranberry juice?"
"Maybe I'll have that scotch after all." He laughed. "I have a feeling it might be more suited to the occasion."
"Know what, I think I'll join you." She walked into the kitchen and started making the drinks. "On the rocks, right?"
"Good memory."
"Stone, I asked you down because I've got to make a big decision." She was bringing the drinks into the living room. "Tonight. You're the closest thing I've got to a knowledgeable sounding board. You have some idea of the risks and rewards here. So do I check into the Dorian Inst.i.tute and let them start injecting doctored-up stem cells into me or not? Turns out that's what Van de Vliet wants to do."
"We're in worse trouble than we thought." He took a scotch. "You've at least seen the place. I don't have a shred of actual physical evidence that those clinical trials are producing results. I can make inferences from what I see on the Web site, but it's nothing you can take to the bank." He ventured a sip, then looked up. "By the way, did you get a chance to ask about the patient who got dropped?"
"Oh s.h.i.+t, I forgot." She sighed. "There was so much going on, with Mom and all the rest, that it completely slipped my--"
"Don't worry about it," he said with a sigh.
Come on, Ally, she thought, this could be really important. You've got to get focused.
"I'll try to remember tomorrow."
"I do think it's kind of vital. But be careful not to mention my name.
I've ... I've just acquired some problems of my own with the Gerex Corporation."
"What kind of 'problems'?"
"Let me take a rain check on answering that. Suffice to say, they're not thrilled about the idea that I'm doing a book in which they're prominently featured." He paused. "Look, Ally, there's a lot going on here. Including that patient who was dropped for some reason that n.o.body wants to disclose. But if you do decide to do it you couldn't have a better physician. Karl Van de Vliet is quite possibly the world's leading researcher in stem cell technology. On the other hand, this is the first time there've been actual human trials. If anybody tells you there's no risk, then they're not behaving ethically."
"Well, the way things stand now, I'm due out there at the inst.i.tute at ten A.M. tomorrow. If I want to, I can be formally entered into the clinical trials on the spot. I've pa.s.sed my qualifying exam."
"You know the trials are almost over. It's like they're taking you at the last minute."
"That's what he said. I'm going to be the last ... whatever. My friend Jennifer just called me a guinea pig. Van de Vliet also said I'd have to stay out there for at least a couple of weeks, probably longer.
That's going to be a b.l.o.o.d.y drag, since things are really busy down at Citis.p.a.ce now."
"Ally, given what I know, or don't know, I don't have an entirely good feeling about this. It could be they're hiding something, but I don't have a clue what it is. It's quite possibly connected to that patient who got terminated. And when I tried to raise this with Gerex's attorneys, no less person than Winston Bartlett himself went ballistic."
"What are you saying? That I shouldn't do it?"
"Hey, I can't make that decision for you. But one possibility would be to just play along for a day or two and see if you can't find out a little more about what went wrong with the patient who was dropped."
"Stone, that's maybe a little paranoid. Couldn't a single patient have been dropped for a whole bunch of different reasons?"
"Of course, but it's not that simple. A patient was dropped from the Gerex clinical trials, and there was no official reason given in the data file. It made me curious enough that I had our paper's attorney pa.s.s along a question about it to their attorneys. That motivated Winston Bartlett to come personally to threaten me. So why is a guy who runs a huge conglomerate suddenly afraid of one tiny question? Is there some problem, some reaction to the procedure that they're terrified will come to light? Ultimately millions and millions of dollars are at stake. I want the book I'm writing to tell the whole story, not just the part they'll want to have told. That's why G.o.d put reporters on earth."
"s.h.i.+t, Stone, I'm glad you're here. I think I told you on the phone, I had someone I loved very much disappear on me some years ago, and I'm feeling very alone at the moment." She looked him over. "Okay, I'll ask. We're adults. Are you married, divorced, attached, unattached, seeing someone, alone and suicidal, what? I mean, where do things stand here?"
"Where things stand is that I'm very happy that I stumbled into you after all the years. And yeah, I've got a little history. At least I'd like to think so. But nothing is going on at the moment." Then he told her about Joyce, the divorce, Amy. "And what was that you said about having somebody disappear on you?" He studied her, reaching back for the feelings that were still buried. Seeing her was bringing it back.
"What did you mean by that? Disappear like a missing person, or disappear as in up and split, or--"
"He was my husband, Steve, and he was a political consultant. He was in a single-engine Cessna that went down in the rain forest in Belize and I miss him terribly."
"I'm so sorry, Ally. Nothing that's happened to me comes close to that tragedy."
"It gets worse. A few months before that, my dad had an accident with a Browning shotgun that was no accident."
"Jesus. What's that line about how the troubles tread on one another's heels. Was he depressed? I guess that's a stupid question."
"He thought he was going to lose his business. After a lifetime of work. What do you think?"
"Ally, I'm really sorry about all that."
"Well, I suppose it could be worse. As I recall, you never knew your dad, did you?"
When am I going to tell her the truth? he asked himself.
"Let's get off the history topic tonight, what do you say. We'll both get ourselves depressed."
"Agreed." She sipped at her scotch. "So ... you're saying I should play along and see if I can find out something about this discharged patient, the mere mention of whom causes grown millionaires to become unhinged?"
"It's what / would do," he said, finis.h.i.+ng off his scotch and settling the gla.s.s on a coaster on a side table. Then he got up. "I have to tell you, Ally, you look awfully tired. I'd love to be responsible for keeping you up all night, but I doubt that would be a humane act."
"It might remind me of a time long ago and not so far away," she said with a faint smile. "But you're right. When I get this tired, I can precipitate an episode."
"I'd offer to drive you out there tomorrow, but that would just get you in trouble. They probably have orders to shoot me on sight. I'm the number one persona non grata with the top management of the Gerex Corporation at the moment. So I'm the last person you want to be seen with. Right now the only way you're going to find out what they're hiding is if n.o.body suspects anything. Which means you've got to show up alone."
Maybe that's true, she thought. But you're a person I'd like to be with tonight.
"Thanks for coming over." She walked over and pecked him on the cheek.
You 're vulnerable tonight, she told herself, wanting to ask him to stay. Don't start making any big life decisions.
Syndrome Part 40
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Syndrome Part 40 summary
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