Amanda, moved by woman's quick compassion, spurred by sympathy, and

feeling the exaltation such an appeal always carries, felt her heart

soften toward the man beside her. But her innate wisdom and her own

strong hold on her emotions prevented her from doing any rash or

foolish thing. Her voice was gentle as she answered, but there was a

finality in it that the man should have noted.

"I'm sorry, Lyman, but I can't do as you say. We can't will whom we

will love. I know you and I would never be happy together."

"But perhaps it will come to you." He was no easy loser. "I'll just

keep on hoping that some day you'll care for me."

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"Don't do that. I'm positive, sure, that I'll never love you. You and I

were never made for each other."

But he refused to accept her answer as final. "Who knows, Amanda," he

said lightly, yet with all the feeling he was capable of at that time,

"perhaps you'll love and marry Lyman Mertzheimer yet! Stranger things

than that have happened. I'm sorry about that word. It seemed just like

a good joke to catch on to the right spelling that way and beat the

others in the match. You are too strict, Amanda, too closely bound by

the Lancaster County ideas of right and wrong. They are too narrow for

these days."

"Oh, no!" she said quickly. "Dishonesty is never right!"

"Well," he laughed, "have it your way! See how docile I have become

already! You'll reform me yet, I bet!"

At the door of her home he bade her good-night and went off whistling,

feeling only a slight unhappiness at her refusal to marry him. It was,

he felt, but a temporary rebuff. She would capitulate some day. His

consummate egotism buoyed his spirits and he went down the road

dreaming of the day he'd marry Amanda Reist and of the wonderful gowns

and jewels he would lavish upon her.