The words of Lyman Mertzheimer lingered with Amanda for many days. He

had seemed so confident, so arrogantly sure, of her ultimate surrender

to his desire to marry her. Soon after the Spelling Bee he returned to

his college and the girl sighed in relief that his presence was not

annoying her. But she reckoned without the efficient United States mail

service. The rejected lover wrote lengthy, friendly letters which she

answered at long intervals by short, impersonal little notes.

"Oh, yea," she said to herself one day, "why does it have to be Lyman

Mertzheimer that falls in love with me? But he might as well fall out

as soon as he can. I'll never marry him. I read somewhere that one girl

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said, 'I'd rather love what I cannot have, than have what I cannot

love,' and that's just the way I feel about it. I won't marry Lyman

Mertzheimer if I have to die Amanda Reist!"

As soon as her school term was ended Amanda entered into the work of

the farm. She helped Millie as much as possible in a determined effort

to forget all about the man who wanted her and whom she did not want,

and, more than that, to think less about her knight, her Sir Galahad,

who evidently had no time to waste on girls.

Millie appreciated Amanda's help. "There's one thing sure," she said

proudly to Mrs. Reist, "our Amanda ain't lazy. It seems to abody she's

workin' more'n ever this here spring. I guess mebbe she thinks she

better get all the ins and outs o' housework so as she can do it right

till she gets married once."

"Ach, I guess Amanda ain't thinkin' of marryin' yet," said the mother.

"You fool yourself," was Millie's wise answer. "Is there ever a woman

born that don't think 'bout it? Women ain't made that way. There ain't

one so ugly nor poor, nor dumb, that don't hanker about it sometimes,

even if she knows it ain't for her."

Here the entrance of Amanda cut short the discussion.

"Millie," asked the girl, "shall I go to market with you this week?"

"Why, yes. I'd be glad for you. Of course, you always help get things

ready here and your Uncle Amos drives me in and helps to get the

baskets emptied and the things on the counters, but I could use you in

sellin'."

"Then I'll come. This lovely spring weather makes me want to go. I like

to see the people come in to buy flowers and early vegetables. It's

like reading a page out of a romance to see the expressions on the

faces of the city people as they buy the products of the country."

"Ach, I don't know what you mean. I guess you got too much fine

learnin' for me. But all I can see in market is people runnin' up one

aisle and down the other to see where the onions or radishes is the

cheapest."