{{betlep115.png}} that Betty liked "folks that were smart!" By that Betty meant those who had certain qualities of mind, irrespective of clothes, or money, or, indeed, opportunity; for leaders do not always come out of the schools and colleges. At first Betty could not sing the hymns for listening to the countess. But she soon piped away, sweetly, too, in a sort of duet with Lucia, whose voice was contralto. "I'll sing with you when we go carolling," whispered Lucia, with a bright glance, as she took the hymn-book which they had been sharing. Betty was ashamed to think afterwards how little of the sermon she heard, after the first of it. The preacher was a little prosy compared to her own pastor; and Betty's thoughts would wander to what Lucia had told her, to Count and Countess Coletti, and with a remorseful feeling to the "Sevillas," who had moved with- out her knowledge. One moment she felt that it made no difference and that they probably were not in the least connected with Ramon; the next minute she was sure that they were related and had something to do with the mys- tery that surrounded the "Don." She thought of various things that Lucia could do, to bring her father -- and knew that she could do none of them. But finally the [[115]]