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"
Yes
,
it
has
,
"
said
Anne
shortly
.
"
Well
,
that
editor
must
be
crazy
.
What
reason
did
he
give
?
"
"
No
reason
at
all
.
There
is
just
a
printed
slip
saying
that
it
was
n't
found
acceptable
.
"
"
I
never
thought
much
of
that
magazine
,
anyway
,
"
said
Diana
hotly
.
"
The
stories
in
it
are
not
half
as
interesting
as
those
in
the
Canadian
Woman
,
although
it
costs
so
much
more
.
I
suppose
the
editor
is
prejudiced
against
any
one
who
is
n't
a
Yankee
.
Do
n't
be
discouraged
,
Anne
.
Remember
how
Mrs.
Morgan
's
stories
came
back
.
Send
yours
to
the
Canadian
Woman
.
"
"
I
believe
I
will
,
"
said
Anne
,
plucking
up
heart
.
"
And
if
it
is
published
I
'll
send
that
American
editor
a
marked
copy
.
But
I
'll
cut
the
sunset
out
.
I
believe
Mr.
Harrison
was
right
.
"
Out
came
the
sunset
;
but
in
spite
of
this
heroic
mutilation
the
editor
of
the
Canadian
Woman
sent
Averil
's
Atonement
back
so
promptly
that
the
indignant
Diana
declared
that
it
could
n't
have
been
read
at
all
,
and
vowed
she
was
going
to
stop
her
subscription
immediately
.
Anne
took
this
second
rejection
with
the
calmness
of
despair
.
She
locked
the
story
away
in
the
garret
trunk
where
the
old
Story
Club
tales
reposed
;
but
first
she
yielded
to
Diana
's
entreaties
and
gave
her
a
copy
.
"
This
is
the
end
of
my
literary
ambitions
,
"
she
said
bitterly
.
She
never
mentioned
the
matter
to
Mr.
Harrison
,
but
one
evening
he
asked
her
bluntly
if
her
story
had
been
accepted
"
No
,
the
editor
would
n't
take
it
,
"
she
answered
briefly
.
Mr.
Harrison
looked
sidewise
at
the
flushed
,
delicate
profile
.