|  | CHAPTER VI. 
THE CORONER'S VERDICT. The shadow of Moloch mountain |  | 
6. CHAPTER VI. 
THE CORONER'S VERDICT.
Semantha Brewster, wife of the deceased, 
being duly summoned and sworn, suddenly 
scandalized all judicial propriety by exclaiming, 
without waiting to be questioned:
“It was Ruth did it!”
“What!” exclaimed the coroner, not more 
startled at the idea than at the mode of conveying 
it.
“It was Ruth that killed him,” repeated 
Semantha doggedly; and before the horrified 
silence that fell upon the company could be 
broken by question or exclamation, she went 
on:
“There was bad blood between them. She 
was jealous of me because I was in her 
mother's shoes, and he set by me, same as a 
man had ought to by his wife, and so there 

night before it happened, he got real mad at
her, and said he'd take her off to live with a
woman over to Milvor that he'd spoke to
about taking her, and she up and declared
she wouldn't go. They had an awful time
about it, and I heard Ruth stamping about
her room pretty much all night. But yesterday
morning he tackled up, and made me
pack all her things in a trunk, and took her
off with him. He had his rifle in the back of
the wagon, going to get it fixed over to Milvor,
and he made her sit over there on her
trunk, because he was so provoked with her
he couldn't bear to have her on the seat alongside
of him. So then, I expect, when they got
into the woods, she up and shot him.”
“Could she use a rifle?” asked the coroner, 
still too much astonished to notice the informality 
of these proceedings.
“I guess you'd think so if you'd seen her, 
as I have, shooting at a mark down in the 
meadow, along with him, when they was good 
together. She'd hit it as well as any man, 
almost,” said Semantha coolly.
“Well—but—where is the child now?' 
stammered the coroner.
“There, again,” rejoined Semantha, triumphantly; 
“she's run off; and what would 
she do that for if she didn't feel she'd done 
what she hadn't ought to?”
“Now, Mrs. Brewster, this isn't the way to 
give evidence. You are to begin at the beginning, 
and tell all that you know of your 
husband's leaving home, and what followed 
relating to it; but do not give any opinions or 
arguments, or accuse any body of any thing. 
Go on, if you please.”
And the coroner, feeling that he had vindicated 
the judicial dignity, and restored things 
to their true position, leaned back in his chair, 
and listened complacently.
Mrs. Brewster, thus adjured, began with her 
story, and repeated it substantially as before, 
contriving, with small feminine tact, to suggest 
the suspicions of Ruth, no longer openly 
expressed.
When she had finished, Joachim Brewster, 
brother of the deceased, was summoned, and 
gave his evidence so closely, to the same 
effect as that of Semantha, that the coroner 
shrewdly inquired, as he finished:
“Did you and Mrs. Brewster talk over together 
what you'd say to-day?”
“No, we didn't. It's because both stories 
 are true that they fay in so well together,” 
said Joachim, a little anxiously.
“Was any body else in or about the house 
that morning?” pursued the coroner.
“No, we don't keep any help. Peleg and 
me carried on the farm, and Semanthy and 
Ruth did the work in the house. There was 
nobody else about.”
“Very well; you can sit down now. Call 
Marston Brent.”
And Marston Brent, being summoned, deposed 
to finding the dead body of Peleg 
Brewster in the water called Blackbriar Pool, 
and bringing it up the previous evening to 
the house of Deacon Barstow, where it now 
lay. He also spoke of searching for and 
finding traces the next morning of the heavy 
wagon and span of horses driven by the deceased, 
and following them down the road to 
a sudden turn, where the wagon lay broken, 
with one horse still attached, and the other 
lying dead not far off. The rifle and the little 
girl's trunk had been thrown out by the 
upsetting of the wagon, and lay in the road 
beside it. The rifle had been discharged, and 
he had found no trace of the child. So ended 
this important evidence, and at its close the 
coroner solemnly asked:
“What is your own opinion, Mr. Brent, 
formed upon these circumstances, of the manner 
in which the deceased came to his death?”
“My opinion is, sir, that the shot which 
killed him was fired from behind, while the 
wagon was passing through the thick clump 
of trees shading Blackbriar Pool; that the explosion 
frightened the horses, who swerved so 
much as to throw Brewster from the wagon 
into the water where I found him, and that 
then they continued down the road as far as 
the turn, where they upset.”
“And do you think it possible that a girl of 
thirteen could have fired the shot which 
killed this man?” continued the coroner, relying 
more than he would have confessed 
upon the opinions of the man before him.
“Certainly, it is possible,” replied Marston 
Brent reluctantly.
“And if the wagon tipped enough to throw 
out her father's body, it is not likely the child 
would have remained in it?”
“No, especially sitting upon a trunk in the 
back of the wagon.”
“And if she had been thrown into the 
pool or upon its banks, you would have found 
her or her body?”

“Certainly. I waded over nearly the 
whole pool when I took the body of the deceased 
from it, and I have been all about 
there this morning.”
“Alone?”
“No; Paul Freeman was with me.”
“That will do, Mr. Brent. Summon Paul 
Freeman.”
But Paul Freeman, however summoned, 
was not to be found, and the latest intelligence 
to be gathered concerning him was Miss 
Rachel Barstow's statement, that about an hour 
before the inquest she had seen him going upstairs 
to his own bedroom. He was not there 
now, however, nor were any of his belongings, 
from which Miss Rachel inferred that he had 
gone to carry them to Mr. Brent's house, whence 
he was to start for the West early the next 
morning.
A messenger was immediately dispatched in 
search of the truant witness, while the examination 
of those present went on; but in a 
brief half hour he returned with the report 
that Paul Freeman had not been seen at Mr. 
Brent's house, or at any other upon the road 
there, and the inquest was perforce brought 
to a close without his testimony, which, indeed, 
was only expected to corroborate that of 
Marston Brent.
The consultation of the jury was long and 
animated—a natural incredulity and horror 
in every mind arguing against the verdict 
plainly suggested by the evidence. Slowly 
and reluctantly, however, man by man yielded 
his wishes to his convictions, and when at last 
the little audience was reädmitted, it was to 
hear that, in the opinion of this jury, “the 
deceased came to his death by a shot fired 
from his own rifle by Ruth Brewster, his 
daughter,” and a warrant for the apprehension 
of the said Ruth was obtained upon the 
spot, and placed in the hands of the County 
Sheriff, then present.
“It's no more that child did it than I!” exclaimed 
Aunt Rachel, bringing one fist down 
into the palm of the other hand. “I say it, 
and I'll stick to it.”
“I wish I could say so too; but I've heard 
too much of the way she and Peleg would 
go on together. They were run in the same 
mould, and when their temper was up, I 
wouldn't have stood in the way not for a good 
deal. I had a hard time of it with that child, 
the dear knows,” said Semantha, with the 
corner of her shawl to her eyes.
 “I don't believe any such story. I knew 
Mary Brewster as well as I know my own 
sister; and I'm not going to believe her child 
could be brought to all that in two years' 
time, even by the worst of management,” rejoined 
Aunt Rachel significantly, and with no 
answer except an oblique gleam from her 
beryl-tinted eyes, Semantha left the house.
|  | CHAPTER VI. 
THE CORONER'S VERDICT. The shadow of Moloch mountain |  | 
 
 