In the summer of 1896, Elva Zona Heaster met her future husband, Erasmus Stribbling Shue.
Erasmus, who everyone called Trout, had just moved to the tiny village of Livesay's Mill in Greenbrier County in West Virginia and was working at a local blacksmith shop.
Zona, the daughter of a local farmer, was immediately smitten with this tall, fit, mysterious stranger.
They married just a few months after their first meeting. By all accounts, they seemed to have a happy union.
That is, until Zona was found dead on their kitchen floor.
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On the morning of January 23, 1897, Trout went to his neighbour's house. He asked his black neighbour Martha Jones, who everyone in the village called Aunt Martha, whether her 11-year-old son Anderson could go to his house to do some chores and check on Zona who he said was feeling unwell.
According to the Washington Post, when Anderson arrived at the property, he found Zona's lifeless body sprawled across the kitchen floor.