Trial By Water

Trial By Water


Unabridged

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"Trial by water by Sewell Peaslee Wright" is a pulp adventure short story written in the late 1920s. The tale uses a hazardous river passage as a crucible to test love and loyalty, focusing on jealousy, courage, and betrayal. Jean Baptiste Chabrier, a quiet northern bushman, guides a canoe through the Assin-nebah rapids with his wife, Charlotte, and their guest, Les Walters, a charming sawyer who has won Charlotte's attention. Sensing her wavering heart, Jean deliberately wrecks the canoe at the safer end of the rapids to force a revealing crisis. In the churning water Charlotte turns to Les, who panics, strikes her away, and scrambles for shore, leaving her to drown. Jean, having seen enough-especially the cut on her cheek from Les's ring-rescues her and brings her to land. The "trial by water" leaves a scar as a lasting reminder and delivers its verdict: Les's cowardice is exposed, Charlotte's misplaced faith is corrected, and Jean's stern test decides the triangle's fate.