and pluck roses for the breakfast room.”
“There are few roses in Duluth,” said Ken, “to speak of. And no breakfast rooms. You breakfast in the dining room, and in the winter you wear flannel underwear and galoshes.”
“California, then. And he can be the son of a fruit king. I’m not narrow.”
Harrietta was thirty-seven and a half when there came upon her a great fear. It had been a wretchedly bad season. Two failures. The rent on her two-room apartment in Fifty-sixth Street jumped from one hundred and twenty-five, which she could afford, to two hundred a month, which she couldn’t. Mary — Irish Mary — her personal maid, left her in January. Personal maids are one of the superstitions of the