the rebuke had come home to him. He was the last man in the world to adopt a system of sacerdotal interference. “I could do it so much better if I was not a clergyman,” he would say to himself. And then, if old Brattle chose to turn his daughter out of the house, on such provocation as the daughter had given him, what was that to him, Fenwick, whether priest or layman? The old man knew what he was about, and had shown his determination very vigorously.

“I’ll try the ironmonger at Warminster,” he said, to his wife.

“I’m afraid it will be of no use.”

“I don’t think it will. Ironmongers are probably harder than millers or farmers⁠—and farmers are very hard. That fellow, Jay, would not even consent to be bail for Sam Brattle. But something must be done.”

“She should be put into a reformatory.”

“It would be too late now. That should have been done at once. At any rate, I’ll go to Warminster. I want to call on old Dr. Dickleburg, and I can do that at the same time.”

He did go to Warminster. He did call on the Doctor, who was not at home;⁠—and he did call also upon Mr. Jay, who was at home.

With Mr. Jay himself his chance was naturally much less than it would be with George Brattle. The ironmonger was connected with the unfortunate young woman only by marriage; and what brother-in-law would take such a sister-in-law to his bosom? And of Mrs. Jay he thought that he knew that she was puritanical, stiff, and severe. Mr. Jay he found in his shop along with an apprentice, but he had no difficulty in leading the master ironmonger along with him through a vista of pots, grates and frying pans, into a small recess at the back of the establishment, in which requests for prolonged credit were usually made, and urgent appeals for speedy payment as often put forth.

“Know the story of Caroline Brattle? Oh yes! I know it, sir,” said Mr. Jay. “We had to know it.” And as he spoke he shook his head, and rubbed his hands together, and looked down upon the ground. There was, however, a humility about the man, a confession on his part, that in talking to an undoubted gentleman he was talking to a superior being, which gave to Fenwick an authority which he had felt himself to want in his intercourse with the farmer.

“I am sure, Mr. Jay, you will agree with me in that she should be saved if possible.”

“As to her soul, sir?” asked the ironmonger.

“Of course, as to her soul. But we must get at that by saving her in this world first.”

Mr. Jay was a slight man, of middle height, with very respectable iron-grey hair that stood almost upright upon his head, but with a poor, inexpressive, thin face below it. He was given to bowing a good deal, rubbing his hands together, smiling courteously, and to the making of many civil little speeches; but his strength as a leading man in Warminster lay in his hair, and in the suit of orderly well-brushed black clothes which he wore on all occasions. He was, too, a man fairly prosperous, who went always to church, paid his way, attended sedulously to his business, and hung his bells, and sold his pots in such a manner as not actually to drive his old customers away by default of work. “Jay is respectable, and I don’t like to leave him,” men would say, when their wives declared that the backs of his grates fell out, and that his nails never would stand hammering. So he prospered; but, perhaps, he owed his prosperity mainly to his hair. He rubbed his hands, and smiled, and bowed his head about, as he thought what answer he might best make. He was quite willing that poor Carry’s soul should be saved. That would naturally be Mr. Fenwick’s affair. But as to saving her body, with any cooperation from himself or Mrs. Jay⁠—he did not see his way at all through such a job as that.

“I’m afraid she is a bad ’un, Mr. Fenwick; I’m afraid she is,” said Mr. Jay.

“The thing is, whether we can’t put our heads together and make her less bad,” said the Vicar. “She must live somewhere, Mr. Jay.”

“I don’t know whether almost the best thing for ’em isn’t to die⁠—of course after they have repented, Mr. Fenwick. You see, sir, it is so very low, and so shameful, and they do bring such disgrace on their poor families. There isn’t anything a young man can do that is nearly so bad⁠—is there, Mr. Fenwick?”

“I’m not at all sure of that, Mr. Jay.”

“Ain’t you now?”

“I’m not going to defend Carry Brattle;⁠—but if you will think how very small an amount of sin may bring a woman to this wretched condition, your heart will be softened. Poor Carry;⁠—she was so bright, and so good and so clever!”

“Clever she was, Mr. Fenwick;⁠—and bright, too, as you call it. But⁠—”

“Of course we know all that. The question now is, what can we do to help her? She is living now at this present moment, an orderly, sober life; but without occupation, or means, or friends. Will your wife let her come to her⁠—for a month or so, just to try her?”

“Come and live here!” exclaimed the ironmonger.

“That is what I would suggest. Who is to give her the shelter of a roof, if a sister will not?”

“I don’t think that Mrs. Jay would undertake that,” said the ironmonger, who had ceased to rub his hands and to bow, and whose face had now become singularly long and lugubrious.

“May I ask her?”

“It wouldn’t do any good, Mr. Fenwick;⁠—it wouldn’t indeed.”

“It ought to do good. May I try?”

“If you ask me, Mr. Fenwick, I should say no; indeed I should. Mrs. Jay isn’t anyway strong, and the bare mention of that disreputable connection produces a sickness internally;⁠—it does, indeed,

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