Patty and Azalea
PATTY AND AZALEA BY CAROLYN WELLS Author of The Patty Books, The Marjorie Books, etc. 1919 THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED WITH LOVING GOOD WISHES TO PRISCILLA KERLEY CONTENTS CHAPTER I WISTARIA PORCH
a retainer from the C. St. and P. Railroad Company for wholly
unnecessary services in Washington--only another way of buying a
man--a transaction arranged by Senator Stevens, was but another stage
in the disintegration of the young Congressman's character, but it
brought him just that much closer to the point where he could claim
Carolina Langdon as his own. And opportunity does not knock twice at a
man's door--unless he is at the head of the machine.
Norton, the persevering young law student who loved the girl who had
been his boyhood playmate, was now Norton who coveted her father's
lands, who boasted that he was on the "inside" in Washington, who was
on the way to fortune--if the new Senator from Mississippi would or
could be forced to stand in favor of the Altacoola naval base.
His conversation with Randolph Langdon, as Haines and Cullen saw them
pass through the hotel lobby, illustrated the nature of the Norton of
the present and his interest in the Altacoola scheme.
"There's no reason why you shouldn't come in on the ground floor in
this proposition, Randolph," he was urging in continuance of the
conversation begun over a table in the cafe. "No reason why you
shouldn't do it, my boy. Why, are you still a child, or are you really
a man? You have now drafts for $50,000, haven't you?"
"Yeah," agreed Langdon, chagrined at Norton's insinuation of
youthfulness and anxious to prove that he was really a man of affairs,
PATTY AND AZALEA BY CAROLYN WELLS Author of The Patty Books, The Marjorie Books, etc. 1919 THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED WITH LOVING GOOD WISHES TO PRISCILLA KERLEY CONTENTS CHAPTER I WISTARIA PORCH