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Bud Haines turned his face toward the speaker and grinned broadly, to the Senator's intense discomfort.
"I'll do more than that," announced Langdon, rising and pounding a fist into his open hand. "I'll make you and Stevens more popular than you ever were in your lives before."
"Bah!" shouted Peabody.
"I'll do even more yet. I'm going to make you generous--patriots. And, I regret to say, I'll give you the chance to make the hits of your careers."
The polished hypocrites looked at him, too astonished to move.
"How? What?" they gasped.
Swept on by his own enthusiasm and the force of his own courageous honesty, the voice of the Southerner rose to oratorical height.
"This afternoon," he exclaimed, "when the naval base committee makes its report, I will rise in my place and declare that for once in the history of the Senate men have been found who place the interests of the Government they serve above any chance of pecuniary reward. These men are the members of the naval base committee.
"With this idea in view, realizing that dishonest men would try to make money out of the Government, these members of the naval base committee, after they settled on Altacoola, went out quietly and secured control of all the land that will be needed for the naval base, and these men secured this at a very nominal figure. Now they are ready to turn over their land to the Government at exactly what they paid for it, without a cent of profit.
"Then they're going to sit up over there in that Senate. They're going to realize that a new kind of politics has arrived in Was.h.i.+ngton--the kind that I and lots of others always thought there was here.
"And, gentlemen"--he advanced on his colleagues triumphantly--"when I, Senator Langdon of Mississippi, your creation in politics, have finished that speech, I dare one of you to get up and deny a word!"
"The boss of the Senate" and his satellite were dumfounded. Firmly believing that Langdon could find no way to pa.s.s the bill for Altacoola and yet spoil their crooked scheme, they were totally unprepared for any such denouement. To think that a simple, old-fas.h.i.+oned planter from the cotton fields of Mississippi could originate such a plan to outwit the two ablest political tricksters in the Senate!
Langdon eyed his colleagues triumphantly.
Peabody, however, was thinking quickly. He was never beaten until the last vote was counted on a roll call. He knew that, no matter how apparently insurmountable an opposition was, a way to overcome it might often be found by the man who exercises strong self-control and a trained brain. This corrupt victor in scores of bitter political engagements on the battlefield of Was.h.i.+ngton was now in his most dangerous mood. He would marshal all his forces. The man to defeat him now must defeat the entire Senate machine and the allies it could gain in an emergency; he must overcome the power of Standard Steel; he must fight the resourceful brain of the masterful Peabody himself.
Peabody whispered to Stevens, "We must pretend to be beaten,"
[Ill.u.s.tration: "AFTER I HAVE FINISHED I DARE ONE OF YOU TO DENY A WORD!"]
Then the Pennsylvanian advanced, smiling, to Langdon and held out his hand.
"Senator Langdon," he said, "I'm beaten. You've beaten the leader of the Senate, something difficult to believe. What's more, you've given me the chance of a lifetime to become known as a public benefactor. As soon as you've finished your speech in the Senate I will get up and make another one--to second yours. Here's my hand. Anything you may ever want out of Peabody in the future shall be yours for the asking."
Langdon refused to grasp the proffered hand.
Senator Stevens made a show of protesting against his superior's seeming surrender.
"But," he objected, "look here--"
Peabody turned upon him instantly.
"Oh, shut up, Stevens; don't be a fool. Come on in. The water's fine."
The pair of schemers, with Norton at their heels, turned away.
The Pennsylvanian drew Stevens into committee room 6 and, ordering the stenographer to leave, drew up chairs where both could sit, facing the door.
"We've thrown dust in that old gander's eyes," whispered Peabody.
"It's now ten after 1. He is to be recognized to make his speech at 3:30. That gives us two hours and twenty minutes--"
"Yes, but for what?" asked Stevens, excitedly. "I've been trying myself to think of something. What will you do--what _can_ you do?"
"The boss of the Senate" smiled patronizingly on the senior Senator from Mississippi, as though amused and scornful of his limitations as a strategist, as a tenacious fighter. Then his jaw set hard, and his brows contracted.
"I will not do anything. I cannot do anything"--he hesitated a full ten seconds--"but Jake Steinert can."
Stevens' hands twitched nervously.
"And," continued Peabody, "I'm expecting a 'phone call from him any moment. I told him this morning that he might be able to make $1,000 before night if--"
The telephone bell at the desk interrupted him.
Peabody leaned over and eagerly clutched the receiver.
The senior Senator from Mississippi jerked himself to his feet. He stood at a window and looked out over the roof tops of the city.
CHAPTER XXVII
MRS. SPANGLER GIVES A LUNCHEON
When Senators Peabody and Stevens had gone Langdon and Bud went over the situation together and concluded that their opponents had no means of defeating Langdon's program--that, after all, Peabody might really have meant his words of surrender.
"But they might try foul play. Better stay right here in the Capitol the rest of the day," suggested Bud.
Langdon scoffed at the idea.
Haines bustled away to get a few mouthfuls of lunch to fortify himself for a busy afternoon--one that was going to be far busier than he imagined.
The telephone bell rang at the Senator's desk. It was Mrs. Spangler's voice that spoke.
"Senator Langdon," she said, "Carolina and Hope Georgia are here at my home for luncheon, and we all want you to join us."
"Sorry I cannot accept," answered the Mississippian, "but I am to make an important speech this afternoon--"
"Oh, yes, I know. The girls and I are coming to hear it. But you have two hours' time, and if you come we can all go over to the Senate together. Now, Senator, humor us a little. Don't disappoint the girls and me. We can all drive over to the Capitol in my carriage."
The planter hesitated, then replied: "All right. I'll be over, but it mustn't be a very long luncheon."
"Gone to eat; back by 3 o'clock," he scratched quickly on a pad on the secretary's desk, and departed.
Mrs. Spangler's luncheons were equally as popular in Was.h.i.+ngton as Senator Langdon's dinners. The Mississippian and his daughters enjoyed the delicacies spread lavishly before them.