Advise and Consent (24 page)

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Authors: Allen Drury

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Genre Fiction, #Political, #Contemporary Fiction

BOOK: Advise and Consent
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Two weeks later the incumbent Congressman announced his retirement in a statement filled with gratitude to his fellow citizens for their long support and many kindnesses, concluding with the suggestion that they give their support to that rising young star of the Carolinas whose future was filled with such bright promise of great things for them and for his country, Seabright B. Cooley. A committee headed by the colonel waited on Seab the next morning, and with a dignified candor that endeared him even further to them, he dispensed with modest coyness and false reluctance and said that he would indeed like to be their Congressman, that he would indeed accept their call, and that they could consider him as of that moment their candidate.

There followed a short, intensive campaign in which he had only token opposition but during which he visited every town and hamlet in the district and personally shook the hands of all but a scattered few of its residents. In November he was given an overwhelming vote of confidence, and in March of 1913 he took his seat in the Congress with the idealism of his own victory strengthened and uplifted by that of the professor from Princeton who moved on the same day into the White House.

For the duration of the Wilson years, four terms to which he was elected by steadily growing majorities, he remained in the House, faithfully supporting the President on every issue, a vigorous and increasingly respected battler for purposes in which he believed absolutely. Something of the stamp of Wilson remained on him forever; to the romantic aura of the South’s lost crusade, so much a part of him and all the South’s representatives in Congress, there was added the gallant memory of another lost crusade: the War to End War and all its brave idealism that not all the bitter compromises and shabby deceits of subsequent decades could ever quite erase from the hearts of those who had been through it. Even today the years tied themselves together along that slender thread, and it was not hard for him to recall the spirit in which he had fought those early battles, and to go forward in that spirit to do battle again.

Not that this was always apparent to his colleagues or the country, of course, for it was not easy for his critics to accord to a man possessed of such vigorous passions and monumental stubbornness as he proved to have, anything but the most standard of motives. Seab, they early said, was out for what he could get for South Carolina, the South, and himself, in that order, and there was nothing he would not do to attain an objective once he had set it for himself. In the House he served on the Post Office and Civil Service Committee in the days when postmasterships were the bedrock of patronage, and he never forgot the ways in which men could be manipulated by appeals to their self-interest and to the interests of their voters back home. When he moved to the Senate, an event which came easily because the man he challenged had been living a little high on the hog in Washington and Seab made the most of it—and also because the old friends in Barnwell and the old friends in Charleston combined to launch a statewide organization that swept all before it—he was lucky enough to be assigned to the Appropriations Committee, and there he found his analysis of other men to be borne out to even greater degree. There were some men who would make any bargain to get a needed appropriation for their states; these he early conquered. There were others who needed more subtle appeals, and because he possessed great intelligence, an instinct for the jugular, and a shrewd understanding of human nature, these too he eventually came to dominate. Very few remained immune to him. Appropriations, Finance, Post Office, and Civil Service were his first committees and were his committees still; and it was not accident that he should have passed up the chairmanships of the latter two, to which he succeeded in due time through the normal inroads of mortality and electoral attrition upon his colleagues, in favor of the chairmanship of Appropriations with all its power in the Senate and indeed throughout the government.

There followed the great years, during which “Seab Cooley runs the country” became a favorite saying in Washington. Not that he did, of course, in many fundamental respects; but in many others, it was not too wide of the mark. Using Appropriations for the weapon it can be in the hands of a determined man, sometimes sweet and subtle, sometimes harshly ruthless, he worked his will with many government departments and agencies and with many of his colleagues; a man to be feared and, many thought, mistrusted; yet a man who always, by his lights, was fiercely faithful to the causes and the friends in which he believed. To the simpler critics who dealt in black and white, the liberal journals, the great northern and eastern newspapers, he was an evil influence to be denounced and vilified and feared; but Seab, like every other human being in government or anywhere else, was not that simple, and indeed he was in many ways more complex than most. Because he was violent in his rages and monumental in his public passions, and because he staged his effects with a shrewdly calculated flamboyance that increased over the years as he grew surer of his power, he was easy to label. But his colleagues knew, as they always know, that the easy label very rarely fits a United States Senator, for his is an office that changes the simple to less simple and makes the complex infinitely more so.

Hurt at first by the labels, he soon decided that he could not escape them and so should bend them to his purposes. Steadily over the years, partly through the development of his native character, in greater part through a shrewd creation of his own legend, he built the picture of Seab Cooley that existed today: intelligent, industrious, persistent, tenacious, violent, passionate, vindictive, and tricky. Men did not take him lightly, and many a legislative battle he had won without a struggle simply because certain of his colleagues were actually afraid of him both politically and physically. There was still a lingering story, apocryphal but one he never bothered to kill because it suited his purposes, that he had once drawn a knife on a colleague on the Senate floor; it added to the awe in which he gradually came to be held as the years lengthened and South Carolina sent him back and back again until now he was in his seventh six-year term with a record of service unapproached by any other man but the late Kenneth McKellar of Tennessee. “Don’t get Seab riled up,” was a catch phrase around the Senate, and for many years it was a brave man who did. Some of course, such as Bob Munson, Orrin Knox, Stanley Danta, Arly Richardson, he had never been able to bluff, even though he had managed to beat them in open contest fairly often. It was only lately that he had begun to realize that perhaps the number of such men was growing, that perhaps he was no longer so strong as he once had been, that age was beginning to erode his position, that those who moved in awe of him just because he was Seab Cooley were dying off or being beaten by younger men who came fresh to the Senate and learned early that while Seab was a man to be wary of, he was also seventy-five years old and neither immortal nor infallible. Not yet had he really been toppled decisively from his throne, but he realized that there was a growing lack of respect for him among the younger members; Lafe Smith was such a one, Blair Sykes was another. There was a growing tendency, of which instinct and the increasingly jocular references of his older friends in the Senate made him increasingly aware, to poke a little fun at Seab, to make him the butt of little private jokes and sniping remarks that once no one would have dared to express, even privately, for fear they might get back and bring down his vindictive vengeance; there was even, as witness last Friday’s exchange with Lafe, an occasional open clash on the Senate floor. And only a week ago there had been the acrid crack he had overheard Blair Sykes make when Paul Hendershot had been defending him in the cloakroom. “When he first came here in Wilson’s Administration,” Paul had said, “there wasn’t a greater liberal than Seab Cooley.” “Oh yes,” Blair snapped impatiently, “I guess even Seab was young once.” Well, so he had been; in the way Paul meant, and in another way too; not for long, but long enough to set the pattern for a life that had much to do with the destinies of the United States.

Smiling and waving and calling in the night from among the white columns of Roselands: to this day he could see them still, Amy and Cornelia and the colonel, long years gone to rest; the colonel during the First World War, his daughters during the Second; Roselands sold to rich Yankees in 1945 and now the center for a drinking, gambling, easy-moraled, industry-based crowd growing fat with Yankee money on the cheap labor of the South. He had only been there once since the new owners took over, and then it was for a visit almost as uncomfortable as the first he ever made there. He had been an object for them to examine, something for them to see, a contact they must make for the sake of their proliferating businesses: their United States Senator, Barnwell’s brightest young man grown very old and just a little funny in his legend. He had been aware of a subtle ridicule, though he knew they would use him for all they could while he remained in office. He sensed that if they had their way this would not be for long, for he could perceive that they wanted a younger man, one not committed to the past, one who would be more flexible on racial matters and more adept at helping them impose a sort of reverse-quiet on the South by giving the spokesmen of its minority what they wanted while the Yankees made their money.

Well, it had not always been so at Roselands. He avoided it now and never even went down the back road that led along its well-kept fences; but it was not just because of the Yankees. They might think he was avoiding it because they were there, and if so, let them think it and be damned. Actually when he accepted their hospitality on that one occasion after the second war it had been his first visit to the plantation in almost fifteen years; and when they had asked in their casual way, “Have you been here before, Senator?” a curious little secret smile they could not fathom had crossed his face. He had not enlightened them. He had only said softly, “Oh, yes, ma’am, yes, indeed. But that was long ago. Yes, ma’am. That was very long, long ago, quite before you all lovely people were born, I think, it was so long ago.”

He could never say exactly at what moment on that first visit he had fallen in love with Amy Cashton, but he could always remember the exalted state in which he had come away from Roselands. The world had been one thing when he rode up the winding lane on his old horse in his new suit; it was quite another when he rode down again. All the fantasies he had not had time or opportunity to indulge while he was running the store and studying nights for high school, all the enormous force of a heart that loved very seldom but when it did loved completely, found their outlet in a sudden overwhelming emotion for the laughing fifteen-year-old who mocked his careful dignity while the colonel shushed her mildly and Cornelia looked disapproving. He had not been able to respond very well, sitting there looking handsome and uneasy and abashed and rather like a mastiff harried by a terrier, and when he went away it was with the helpless conviction that however much he might want to see her again, she could not possibly want to see him. Two days later her maid came by the store and under pretext of buying some linen goods handed him a note telling him to meet her next afternoon at the old well house at the north back corner of Roselands. Next afternoon he turned the store over to his brother on some pretext of going down street to see a friend, hitched up his horse, and rode away into a golden world that lasted exactly three months; whereupon, although there were various later attempts to recreate it by a heart that found itself too late contrite, it ended forever.

For that much time, however, he discovered for himself the simple wonder of just being together with someone, the dreamlike state in which it does not matter what is said, what is done, when the mere state of being, as long as it is in the presence of the beloved, is enough. He could not recall much of what they said, talked about, did; mostly, he suspected, they sat by the well house and threw stones in the water; but around their secret hours such a golden haze enwrapped itself that it was as though all time and no time had come together in a moment of eternity that would last forever. Certainly it had for him, at any rate; and so, he knew, it had for her, even though she had chosen to destroy it because she was too young and too shallow then to understand the depths of the emotion she had aroused, or the qualities of the heart that had in absolute candor and absolutely without defenses offered itself to her.

Often and often he had gone over the course of those three months, during which they had met in such fashion eleven times. The elaborate secrecy, almost gamelike in its childish pretending, should have given him some warning, for a moment’s reflection would have recalled that the colonel liked him, had given proof of it, and surely would not have minded him courting his daughter in straightforward fashion; but he was too bemused for reflection. Toward the end of their time together he had felt a sexual desire so great that he was afraid he might say or do something that would lose her forever; it was the measure of his innocence that he thought he was alone in this feeling. But he had been brought up by rigid standards, he had a romantic concept of what a lady thought and felt, and he feared more than anything in the world that he might violate it by some crudity or intimation of lust that would break the bounds of desperate self-control imposed upon him by upbringing and his own youthful imaginings. So it was that when she turned to him on that last day and first offered and then withdrew herself with a cruelly calculated deliberation that made a shattering mockery of his own emotions, instead of being angered as she wanted him to be into doing what had consumed him day and night, heart, mind, and body for weeks, he turned and fled in such tumult of being that it was hours before he finally got home and began the long, terrible, agonizing process of trying to put back together some semblance of a world that made sense.

His first conviction, for he was indeed an innocent then, was that the whole thing had been his doing, that it had been his exclusive idea, that he must have desperately shocked, offended, and horrified one who had trusted and cared for him and been his friend. It did not occur to him for many a long day after that this was not the case. So he began to apologize, writing crippled, agonized letters in which he abandoned all attempts to maintain the dignity of his own heart, taking on himself all blame, humbling himself endlessly, beseeching over and over again for lost happiness, addressing an Amy such as no Amy that ever existed except in his own mind; for of course if such an Amy had existed she would have been kind to him and answered, and of course there was no answer. He entered a period during which life became a dark valley that he walked through filled with shadowy figures that he talked to; while all the time sick, agonized, endless, futile conversations went on in his heart: I could have done such wonderful things for you. We could have been so happy together. If you would only let me show you how much you mean to me. Help me, beloved; help me, dear love. All of this coincided with his first months in college, and it was not until later that he realized how very strong his own character must be, that he could have been going through all that and still have managed to matriculate, begin his courses, and start his campus life with an outward stability and ease that guaranteed it success. Looking back, he marveled that he had survived with sanity intact, so agonizing had the experience been; but in time he understood that having survived that he could survive anything. And the day came when he was even grateful that it had happened, for it had taught him things about himself and his own strength that he could never have learned any other way, and that, once learned, could never be shaken by anyone.

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