The fact that Believers willingly shared their food with the poor families living nearby did not always quiet the resentment of the world.
Brock watched her, his mouth hovering on the edge of a smile, which only heightened Roseâs wariness. She beckoned toward Gilbert and Celia.
âSheriff, you should be aware that our guests, Gilbert Griffiths and Celia Griffiths, are kin of the unfortunate man. They are very upset, as Iâm sure you can imagine.â
Brockâs quick eyes snapped to the couple, who looked anything but upset.
âWife?â
Celia nodded.
âDonât miss him much?â Brock asked.
âSheriff, I can assure you that Celia is devastated,â Earl said, stepping to Celiaâs side.
âTrue,â said Gilbert. âCelia does not easily display her emotions.â
âUh-huh. You a brother of the deceased?â Brock asked. âI see youâre about the same size.â
âFirst cousin,â Gilbert said.
âYou were close, then?â Deputy Grady OâNeal asked. Rose knew the sympathy in his voice to be genuine. His own people were local tobacco growers and well-to-do, but they maintained the closeness of hill-country families. Grady had practically grown up with his first cousins.
âHugh believed as we do in the principles of Robert Owen,â Gilbert said. âYou see, we are convinced that a civilized and happy human being emerges only from the right kind of education; that is, if all children were taught to be rational and truth-seeking in their thinking, they would inevitablyââ
âAnybody hate your cousin enough to want him dead?â Sheriff Brock asked. He tilted his head as if to observe Gilbert from a more revealing angle.
Gilbert stared at him for several moments. âHate? I . . .â His eyes - slid over to Hughâs still form, now covered by a wornblanket. He cleared his throat. âI hardly think so. Hugh had a very kind heart. Are you . . . do you really suspect he might have been murdered?â
Brockâs smirk suggested that where Shakers were concerned, any abomination was possible. Roseâs jaw set in determination. She knew that from now on, when she put her hands to work, it must be in the search for truth. Sheriff Brock would stop searching as soon as heâd settled on the truth that pleased him.
FIVE
âW AS IT THINE INTENTION THAT I NOT BE TOLD OF THE SHERIFF â S arrival? Isnât it enough that I must dine alone in the Ministry House; is the village now run without me? Am I no longer elder?â
âWilhelm, there was no slight intended,â Rose said, feeling weary, though it was still morning. Wilhelm often drained her energy, like a fire sucking oxygen from a burning building. It didnât help that he insisted on using the archaic âtheeâ instead of âyou.â Somehow it lent an almost scriptural significance to anything he said.
âSheriff Brock and Grady know the layout of the village,â she said. âYou told them the body was in the orchard, so they simply went directly to the orchard. They believed there was no time to waste. Would you have preferred that I leave them there alone, while I came back to fetch you?â
Wilhelm glowered toward the Trusteesâ Office, at the west end of the village, where the dust was still settling from the recent departure of the sheriffâs brown Buick. Rose stood near him, but not too near, in front of the Ministry House. To be truthful, she very much wanted to keep Wilhelm out of the way. He had a habit of stirring up pots that were already boiling. She hoped to determine the truth of Hugh Griffithsâ death quickly and quietly.
âWell, what did the sheriff conclude? Are we to be blamed, as usual?â
Rose paused to measure her words. âHe certainly did not conclude that we Believers are responsible for Hughâs death,â she said. âAs you know, the