<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE ROSE-GARDEN HUSBAND</h1>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>MARGARET WIDDEMER</h2>
<p class="center">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</p>
<h3>WALTER BIGGS<br/><br/></h3>
<p class="center">NEW YORK GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS<br/>
COPYRIGHT 1914, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY<br/>
COPYRIGHT 1915, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY<br/>
<br/><br/>
PUBLISHED, JANUARY 27, 1915<br/>
SECOND PRINTING, FEBRUARY 6, 1915<br/>
THIRD PRINTING, MARCH 12, 1915<br/>
FOURTH PRINTING, APRIL 23, 1915<br/>
FIFTH PRINTING, JUNE 10, 1915<br/>
SIXTH PRINTING, AUGUST 6, 1915<br/>
SEVENTH PRINTING, OCTOBER 21, 1915<br/>
EIGHTH PRINTING, MAY 1, 1916<br/>
NINTH PRINTING, OCTOBER 30, 1916</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-004.jpg" width-obs="442" height-obs="600" alt="YOU KNOW, I MARRIED YOU PRINCIPALLY FOR A ROSE-GARDEN" title="" /> <span class="caption">"YOU KNOW, I MARRIED YOU PRINCIPALLY FOR A ROSE-GARDEN, AND THAT'S <i>LOVELY</i>!"</span> <br/><i>Page <SPAN href='#Page_172'><b>172</b></SPAN></i></div>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3><br/><br/>IN LOVING MEMORY</h3>
<h4>OF</h4>
<h2>HOWARD TAYLOR WIDDEMER<br/><br/></h2>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
<div class='centered'>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" width="50%" cellspacing="0" summary="CONTENTS">
<tr><td rowspan="14"><ANTIMG src="images/spine.jpg" width-obs="121" height-obs="600" alt="book spine" title="" /></td><td align='left'><SPAN href="#I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#VII"><b>CHAPTER VII</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#IX"><b>CHAPTER IX</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#X"><b>CHAPTER X</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#XI"><b>CHAPTER XI</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#XII"><b>CHAPTER XII</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII</b></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><SPAN href="#XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV</b></SPAN></td></tr>
</table></div>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><br/><br/><SPAN name="THE_ROSE-GARDEN_HUSBAND" id="THE_ROSE-GARDEN_HUSBAND"></SPAN>THE ROSE-GARDEN HUSBAND<br/><br/></h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN>I</h2>
<p>The Liberry Teacher lifted her eyes from a half-made catalogue-card,
eyed the relentlessly slow clock and checked a long wriggle of purest,
frankest weariness. Then she gave a furtive glance around to see if the
children had noticed she was off guard; for if they had she knew the
whole crowd might take more liberties than they ought to, and have to be
spoken to by the janitor. He could do a great deal with them, because he
understood their attitude to life, but that wasn't good for the Liberry
Teacher's record.</p>
<p>It was four o'clock of a stickily wet Saturday. As long as it is
anything from Monday to Friday the average library attendant goes around
thanking her stars she isn't a school-teacher; but the last day of the
week, when the rest of the world is having its relaxing Saturday off and
coming<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span> to gloat over you as it acquires its Sunday-reading best seller,
if you work in a library you begin just at noon to wish devoutly that
you'd taken up scrubbing-by-the-day, or hack-driving, or porch-climbing
or—anything on earth that gave you a weekly half-holiday!</p>
<p>So the Liberry Teacher braced herself severely, and put on her
reading-glasses with a view to looking older and more firm. "Liberry
Teacher," it might be well to explain, was not her official title. Her
description on the pay-roll ran "Assistant for the Children's
Department, Greenway Branch, City Public Library." Grown-up people, when
she happened to run across them, called her Miss Braithwaite. But
"Liberry Teacher" was the only name the children ever used, and she saw
scarcely anybody but the children, six days a week, fifty-one weeks a
year. As for her real name, that nobody ever called her by, <i>that</i> was
Phyllis Narcissa.</p>
<p>She was quite willing to have such a name as that buried out of sight.
She had a sense of fitness; and such a name belonged back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span> in an old New
England parsonage garden full of pink roses and nice green caterpillars
and girl-dreams, and the days before she was eighteen: not in a smutty
city library, attached to a twenty-five-year-old young woman with
reading-glasses and fine discipline and a woolen shirt-waist!</p>
<p>It wasn't that the Liberry Teacher didn't like her position. She not
only liked it, but she had a great deal of admiration for it, because it
had been exceedingly hard to get. She had held it firmly now for a whole
year. Before that she had been in the Cataloguing, where your eyes hurt
and you get a little pain between your shoulders, but you sit down and
can talk to other girls; and before that in the Circulation, where it
hurts your feet and you get ink on your fingers, but you see lots of
funny things happening. She had started at eighteen years old, at thirty
dollars a month. Now she was twenty-five, and she got all of fifty
dollars, so she ought to have been a very happy Liberry Teacher indeed,
and generally she was. When the children wanted to specify her
particularly they described her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span> as "the pretty one that laughs." But at
four o'clock of a wet Saturday afternoon, in a badly ventilated, badly
lighted room full of damp little unwashed foreign children, even the
most sunny-hearted Liberry Teacher may be excused for having thoughts
that are a little tired and cross and restless.</p>
<p>She flung herself back in her desk-chair and watched, with brazen
indifference, Giovanni and Liberata Bruno stickily pawing the colored
Bird Book that was supposed to be looked at only under supervision; she
ignored the fact that three little Czechs were fighting over the wailing
library cat; and the sounds of conflict caused by Jimsy Hoolan's desire
to get the last-surviving Alger book away from John Zanowski moved her
not a whit. The Liberry Teacher had stopped, for five minutes, being
grown-up and responsible, and she was wishing—wishing hard and
vengefully. This is always a risky thing to do, because you never know
when the Destinies may overhear you and take you at your exact word.
With the detailed and careful accuracy one acquires in library work, she
was wishing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span> for a sum of money, a garden, and a husband—but
principally a husband. This is why:</p>
<p>That day as she was returning from her long-deferred twenty-minute
dairy-lunch, she had charged, umbrella down, almost full into a pretty
lady getting out of a shiny gray limousine. Such an unnecessarily pretty
lady, all furs and fluffles and veils and perfumes and waved hair! Her
cheeks were pink and her expression was placid, and each of her
white-gloved hands held tight to a pretty picture-book child who was
wriggling with wild excitement. One had yellow frilly hair and one had
brown bobbed hair, and both were quaintly, immaculately, expensively
kissable. They were the kind of children every girl wishes she could
have a set like, and hugs when she gets a chance. Mother and children
were making their way, under an awning that crossed the street, to the
matinee of a fairy-play.</p>
<p>The Liberry Teacher smiled at the children with more than her accustomed
goodwill, and lowered her umbrella quickly to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span> let them pass. The mother
smiled back, a smile that changed, as the Liberry Teacher passed, to
puzzled remembrance. The gay little family went on into the theatre, and
Phyllis Braithwaite hurried on back to her work, trying to think who the
pretty lady could have been, to have seemed to almost remember her.
Somebody who took books out of the library, doubtless. Still the pretty
lady's face did not seem to fit that conjecture, though it still worried
her by its vague familiarity. Finally the solution came, just as Phyllis
was pulling off her raincoat in the dark little cloak-room. She nearly
dropped the coat.</p>
<p>"Eva Atkinson!" she said.</p>
<p>Eva Atkinson!... If it had been anybody else but <i>Eva</i>!</p>
<p>You see, back in long-ago, in the little leisurely windblown New England
town where Phyllis Braithwaite had lived till she was almost eighteen,
there had been a Principal Grocer. And Eva Atkinson had been his
daughter, not so very pretty, not so very pleasant, not so very clever,
and about six years older than Phyllis. Phyllis,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span> as she tried vainly to
make her damp, straight hair go back the way it should, remembered
hearing that Eva had married and come to this city to live. She had
never heard where. And this had been Eva—Eva, by the grace of gold,
radiantly complexioned, wonderfully groomed, beautifully gowned, and
looking twenty-four, perhaps, at most: with a car and a placid
expression and <i>heaps</i> of money, and pretty, clean children! The Liberry
Teacher, severely work-garbed and weather-draggled, jerked herself away
from the small greenish cloak-room mirror that was unkind to you at your
best.</p>
<p>She dashed down to the basement, harried by her usual panic-stricken
twenty-minutes-late feeling. She had only taken one glance at herself in
the wiggly mirror, but that one had been enough for her peace of mind,
supposing her to have had any left before. She felt as if she wanted to
break all the mirrors in the world, like the wicked queen in the French
fairy-tale.</p>
<p>Most people rather liked the face Phyllis saw in the mirror; but to her
own eyes, fresh from the dazzling vision of that Eva Atkinson<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span> who had
been dowdy and stupid in the far-back time when seventeen-year-old
Phyllis was "growin' up as pretty as a picture," the tired,
twenty-five-year-old, workaday face in the green glass was <i>dreadful</i>.
What made her feel worst—and she entertained the thought with a
whimsical consciousness of its impertinent vanity—was that she'd had so
much more raw material than Eva! And the world had given Eva a chance
because her father was rich. And she, Phyllis, was condemned to be tidy
and accurate, and no more, just because she had to earn her living. That
face in the greenish glass, looking tiredly back at her! She gave a
little out-loud cry of vexation now as she thought of it, two hours
later.</p>
<p>"I must have looked to Eva like a battered bisque doll—no wonder she
couldn't place me!" she muttered crossly.</p>
<p>And it must be worse and more of it now, because in the interval between
two and four there had been many little sticky fingers pulling at her
sleeves and skirt, and you just <i>have</i> to cuddle dear little library
children, even when they're not extra clean;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span> and when Vera Aronsohn
burst into heartbroken tears on the Liberry Teacher's blue woolen
shoulder because her pet fairy-book was missing, she had caught several
strands of the Teacher's yellow hair in her anguish, much to the hair's
detriment.</p>
<p>It was straight, heavy hair, and it would have been of a dense and
fluffy honey-color, only that it was tarnished for lack of the constant
sunnings and brushings which blonde hair must have to stay its best
self. And her skin, too, that should have been a living rose-and-cream,
was dulled by exposure to all weathers, and lack of time to pet it with
creams and powders; perhaps a little, too, by the very stupid things to
eat one gets at a dairy-lunch and boarding-house. Some of the assistants
did interesting cooking over the library gas-range, but the Liberry
Teacher couldn't do that because she hadn't time.</p>
<p>She went on defiantly thinking about her looks. It isn't a noble-minded
thing to do, but when you might be so very, very pretty if you only had
a little time to be it in—"Yes, I <i>might</i>!" said Phyllis to her
shocked<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span> self defiantly.... Yes, the shape of her face was all right
still. Hard work and scant attention couldn't spoil its pretty oval. But
her eyes—well, you can't keep your eyes as blue and luminous and
childlike as they were back in the New England country, when you have
been using them hard for years in a bad light. And oh, they had been
such <i>nice</i> eyes when she was just Phyllis Narcissa at home, so long and
blue and wondering! And now the cataloguing had heavied the lids and
etched a line between her straight brown brows. They weren't decorative
eyes now ... and they filled with indignant self-sympathy. The Liberry
Teacher laughed at herself a little here. The idea of eyes that cried
about themselves was funny, somehow.</p>
<p>"Direct from producer to consumer!" she quoted half-aloud, and wiped
each eye conscientiously by itself.</p>
<p>"Teacher! I want a liberry called 'Bride of Lemon Hill!' demanded a
small citizen just here. The school teacher, she says I must to have
it!"</p>
<p>Phyllis thought hard. But she had to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span> search the pinned-up list of
required reading for schools for three solid minutes before she bestowed
"The Bride of Lammermoor" on a thirteen-year-old daughter of Hungary.</p>
<p>"This is it, isn't it, honey?" she asked with the flashing smile for
which her children, among other things, adored her.</p>
<p>"Yes, ma'am, thank you, teacher," said the thirteen-year-old gratefully;
and went off to a corner, where she sat till closing time entranced over
her own happy choice, "The Adventures of Peter Rabbit," with colored
pictures dotting it satisfactorily. The Liberry Teacher knew that it was
her duty to go over and hypnotize the child into reading something which
would lead more directly to Browning and Strindberg. But she didn't.</p>
<p>"Poor little wop!" she thought unacademically. "Let her be happy in her
own way!"</p>
<p>And the Liberry Teacher herself went on being unhappy in <i>her</i> own way.</p>
<p>"I'm just a battered bisque doll!" she repeated to herself bitterly.</p>
<p>But she was wrong. One is apt to exag<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span>gerate things on a workaday
Saturday afternoon. She looked more like a pretty bisque figurine; slim
and clear-cut, and a little neglected, perhaps, by its owners, and
dressed in working clothes instead of the pretty draperies it should
have had; but needing only a touch or so, a little dusting, so to speak,
to be as good as ever.</p>
<p>"Eva <i>never</i> was as pretty as I was!" her rebellious thoughts went on.
You think things, you know, that you'd never say aloud. "I'm sick of
elevating the public! I'm sick of working hard fifty-one weeks out of
fifty-two for board and lodging and carfare and shirtwaists and the
occasional society of a few girls who don't get any more out of life
than I do! I'm sick of libraries, and of being efficient! I want to be a
real girl! Oh, I wish—I wish I had a lot of money, and a rose-garden,
and a <i>husband</i>!"</p>
<p>The Liberry Teacher was aghast at herself. She hadn't meant to wish such
a very unmaidenly thing so hard. She jumped up and dashed across the
room and began frantically to shelf-read books, explaining<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span> meanwhile
with most violent emphasis to the listening Destinies:</p>
<p>"I didn't—oh, I <i>didn</i>'t mean a <i>real</i> husband. It isn't that I yearn
to be married to some good man, like an old maid or a Duchess novel.
I—I just want all the lovely things Eva has, or any girl that <i>marries</i>
them, without any trouble but taking care of a man. One man <i>couldn't</i>
but be easier than a whole roomful of library babies. I want to be
looked after, and have time to keep pretty, and a chance to make
friends, and lovely frocks with lots of lace on them, and just months
and months and months when I never had to do anything by a
clock—and—and a rose-garden!"</p>
<p>This last idea was dangerous. It isn't a good thing, if you want to be
contented with your lot, to think of rose-gardens in a stuffy city
library o' Saturdays; especially when where you were brought up
rose-gardens were one of the common necessities of life; and more
especially when you are tired almost to the crying-point, and have all
the week's big sisters back of it dragging on you, and all its little
sisters to come<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span> worrying at you, and—time not up till six.</p>
<p>But the Liberry Teacher went blindly on straightening shelves nearly as
fast as the children could muss them up, and thinking about that
rose-garden she wanted, with files of masseuses and manicures and French
maids and messenger-boys with boxes banked soothingly behind every bush.
And the thought became too beautiful to dally with.</p>
<p>"I'd marry <i>anything</i> that would give me a rose-garden!" reiterated the
Liberry Teacher passionately to the Destinies, who are rather catty
ladies, and apt to catch up unguarded remarks you make. "<i>Anything</i>—so
long as it was a gentleman—and he didn't scold me—and—and—I didn't
have to associate with him!" her New England maidenliness added in
haste.</p>
<p>Then, for the librarian who cannot laugh, like the one who reads, is
supposed in library circles to be lost, Phyllis shook herself and
laughed at herself a little, bravely. Then she collected the most
uproarious of her flock around her and began telling them stories out of
the "Merry Adventures of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span> Robin Hood." It would keep the children quiet,
and her thoughts, too. She put rose-gardens, not to say manicurists and
husbands, severely out of her head. But you can't play fast and loose
with the Destinies that way.</p>
<p>"Done!" they had replied quietly to her last schedule of requirements.
"We'll send our messenger over right away." It was not their fault that
the Liberry Teacher could not hear them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />