FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   >>  
e Capitol had taught him that when the Senate machine was quiet it was time for some one to get out from under. Miss Williams, the naval committee's stenographer, entered. "Senator Langdon," she said, "Senator Peabody and Senator Stevens are in committee room 6, and they told me to tell you that they'd be--I can't say it. Please, sir, I--" "D--d," interpolated Langdon, laughing. "Yes, sir, that's it. They'll be--that--if they come in here at 12:30. You must come to them, they say." "Tell the gentlemen I'm sitting here with my hat on the back of my head, smoking a good see-gar, with nails driven through both shoes into the floor--and looking at the clock." At 12:25 Senator Stevens entered. "I came to warn you, Langdon," he said, "that Senator Peabody's patience is nearly exhausted. You must come to see him at once if you expect the South to get a naval base at Altacoola or anywhere else. If you do not agree to take his advice this naval bill and any other that you are interested in now or in future will be trampled underfoot in the Senate. Mississippi will have no use for a Senator who cannot produce results in Washington, and that will prove the bitterest lesson you have ever learned." "I'm waiting for Peabody here, Stevens." "Oh, ridiculous! Of course he's not coming. Why, Langdon, he's the king of the Senate. He has the biggest men of the country at his call. He's--" "He's got one minute left," observed Langdon, looking at the clock, "but he'll come. I trust Peabody more than the best clock made at a time like this, when--" The figure of the senior Senator from Pennsylvania appeared in the doorway. "Good-day, Senator Langdon," he remarked, icily. "Same to you. Have a see-gar, Senator?" said Langdon. He turned and winked significantly at Haines. The three Senators seated themselves. "I suppose you wouldn't consider yourself so important, Langdon, if you knew that we now find we can get another member of the naval affairs committee over to our side for Altacoola?" began Peabody. "That gives us a majority of the committee without your vote." "That wouldn't prevent me from making a minority report for Gulf City and explaining why I made that report, would it?" the Mississippian asked, blandly. Peabody and Stevens both knew that it wouldn't. Stevens exchanged glances with "the boss of the Senate," and in low voice began making to Langdon a proposition to which Peabody's assent had be
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   >>  



Top keywords:

Langdon

 

Senator

 

Peabody

 
Stevens
 

committee

 

Senate

 

wouldn

 
Altacoola
 

entered

 

making


report

 

senior

 
Pennsylvania
 

proposition

 

appeared

 
figure
 

remarked

 

doorway

 

country

 

biggest


assent
 

minute

 
observed
 

Senators

 

explaining

 

affairs

 

member

 

minority

 
prevent
 

majority


coming
 

seated

 

suppose

 

winked

 
significantly
 

Haines

 

glances

 

important

 
Mississippian
 

blandly


exchanged

 

turned

 

sitting

 

gentlemen

 
smoking
 

driven

 

laughing

 

machine

 
Capitol
 

taught