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The Corrections

The Corrections

Titel: The Corrections Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jonathan Franzen
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wink— letting the market do its job .
    Denise touched Gary’s shoulder and pointed to a table behind the dais, where Merilee Finch was standing by herself and putting salmon in her mouth. “Our prey is feeding. I say we pounce.”
    “What for?” Gary said.
    “To get Dad signed up for testing.”
    Nothing about the idea of Alfred’s participation in a Phase II study appealed to Gary, but it occurred to him that by letting Denise broach the topic of Alfred’s affliction, by letting her create sympathy for the Lamberts and establish their moral claim on Axon’s favors, he could increase his chances of getting his five thousand shares.
    “You do the talking,” he said, standing up. “Then I’ll have a question for her, too.”
    As he and Denise moved toward the dais, heads turned to admire Denise’s legs.
    “What part of ‘no comment’ didn’t you understand?” Daffy Anderson asked a questioner for a laugh.
    The cheeks of Axon’s CEO were puffed out like a squirrel’s. Merilee Finch put a napkin to her mouth and regarded the accosting Lamberts warily. “I’m so starving,” she said. It was a thin woman’s apology for being corporeal. “We’ll be setting up some tables in a couple of minutes, if you don’t mind waiting.”
    “This is a semi-private question,” Denise said.
    Finch swallowed with difficulty—maybe self-consciousness, maybe insufficient chewing. “Yeah?”
    Denise and Gary introduced themselves and Denise mentioned the letter that Alfred had been sent.
    “I had to eat something,” Finch explained, shoveling up lentils. “I think Joe was the one who wrote to your father. I’m assuming we’re all square there now. He’d be happy to talk to you if you still had questions.”
    “Our question is more for you,” Denise said.
    “Sorry. One more bite here.” Finch chewed her salmon with labored jawstrokes, swallowed again, and dropped her napkin on the plate. “As far as that patent goes, I’ll tell you frankly, we considered just infringing. That’s what everybody else does. But Curly’s an inventor himself. He wanted to do the right thing.”
    “Frankly,” Gary said, “the right thing might have been to offer more.”
    Finch’s tongue was probing beneath her upper lip like a cat beneath blankets. “You may have a somewhat inflated idea of your father’s achievement,” she said. “A lot of researchers were studying those gels in the sixties. The discovery of electrical anisotropy is generally, I believe, credited to a teamat Cornell. Plus I understand from Joe that the wording of that patent is unspecific. It doesn’t even refer to the brain; it’s just ‘human tissues.’ Justice is the right of the stronger, when it comes to patent law. I think our offer was rather generous.”
    Gary made his I’m-a-jerk face and looked at the dais, where Daffy Anderson was being mobbed by well-wishers and supplicants.
    “Our father was fine with the offer,” Denise assured Finch. “And he’ll be happy to know what you guys are doing.”
    Female bonding, the making of nice, faintly nauseated Gary.
    “I forget which hospital he’s with,” Finch said.
    “He’s not,” Denise said. “He was a railroad engineer. He had a lab in our basement.”
    Finch was surprised. “He did that work as an amateur?”
    Gary didn’t know which version of Alfred made him angrier: the spiteful old tyrant who’d made a brilliant discovery in the basement and cheated himself out of a fortune, or the clueless basement amateur who’d unwittingly replicated the work of real chemists, spent scarce family money to file and maintain a vaguely worded patent, and was now being tossed a scrap from the table of Earl Eberle. Both versions incensed him.
    Perhaps it was best, after all, that the old man had ignored Gary’s advice and taken the money.
    “My dad has Parkinson’s,” Denise said.
    “Oh, I’m very sorry.”
    “Well, and we were wondering if you might include him in the testing of your—product.”
    “Conceivably,” Finch said. “We’d have to ask Curly. I do like the human-interest aspect. Does your dad live around here?”
    “He’s in St. Jude.”
    Finch frowned. “It won’t work if you can’t get him to Schwenksville twice a week for at least six months.”
    “Not a problem,” Denise said, turning to Gary. “Right?”
    Gary was hating everything about this conversation. Health health, female female, nice nice, easy easy. He didn’t answer.
    “How is he

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