The Living Record: A Mercy Line Book
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Beschrijving
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A guilty man can still be the only living proof. And that makes him dangerous to everyone. Samuel Whitcomb is not innocent. He hurt Eli Sutter. He stole what was not his. He ran west with evidence in his hand and guilt on his back. Now he sits in the Mercy Crossing jail under Sheriff Jonah Bell's key, charged for what he did and watched by a town eager to decide what his life is worth. For Oren Sutter, Samuel is the man who left his son wounded. For Mara Whitcomb, he is still her son-but not a son she will excuse. For Miriam Cole, he is part of a record too important to let powerful men trim into usefulness. And for Halvern County, Samuel is becoming a problem. Deputy County Solicitor Elias Voss arrives with clean papers, polished language, and a transport order that would move Samuel out of Mercy Crossing and into county hands before his testimony can be completed. Voss calls it procedure. Oren calls it justice. The town calls it order. Jonah hears something else. A living witness being narrowed. A guilty man being made convenient. >Samuel knows the Halvern notation matters. He knows payment was hidden as cargo. He knows the county side was not blind. But he refuses to sign a statement that can be cut loose from his living voice and turned into whatever cleaner men need it to mean. Now Jonah must hold a dangerous line: keep Samuel charged without letting his guilt make him disposable, protect Eli Sutter's injury from becoming someone else's argument, preserve Miriam's packet from county handling, and prepare a transport that may be lawful on paper but deadly on the road. Because a record can serve truth. >As county guard Silas Brandt enters the jail, Voss presses for removal, Oren's grief hardens, Mara refuses both denial and erasure, and Samuel's unsigned testimony becomes more dangerous by the hour, Jonah must decide what custody really means when the prisoner is guilty, necessary, and inconvenient to men with authority. The Living Record is a gripping Christian frontier western for readers who love legal suspense, marshal justice, railroad-town secrets, morally complex prisoners, dangerous testimony, and faith-rooted stories where mercy and judgment must both tell the whole truth. Ride back into Mercy Crossing-but keep the record whole. Some men are not erased because they are innocent. They are protected because truth still has breath in them.
Vergelijk aanbieders (1)
A guilty man can still be the only living proof. And that makes him dangerous to everyone. Samuel Whitcomb is not innocent. He hurt Eli Sutter. He stole what was not his. He ran west with evidence in his hand and guilt on his back. Now he sits in the Mercy Crossing jail under Sheriff Jonah Bell's key, charged for what he did and watched by a town eager to decide what his life is worth. For Oren Sutter, Samuel is the man who left his son wounded. For Mara Whitcomb, he is still her son-but not a son she will excuse. For Miriam Cole, he is part of a record too important to let powerful men trim into usefulness. And for Halvern County, Samuel is becoming a problem. Deputy County Solicitor Elias Voss arrives with clean papers, polished language, and a transport order that would move Samuel out of Mercy Crossing and into county hands before his testimony can be completed. Voss calls it procedure. Oren calls it justice. The town calls it order. Jonah hears something else. A living witness being narrowed. A guilty man being made convenient. >Samuel knows the Halvern notation matters. He knows payment was hidden as cargo. He knows the county side was not blind. But he refuses to sign a statement that can be cut loose from his living voice and turned into whatever cleaner men need it to mean. Now Jonah must hold a dangerous line: keep Samuel charged without letting his guilt make him disposable, protect Eli Sutter's injury from becoming someone else's argument, preserve Miriam's packet from county handling, and prepare a transport that may be lawful on paper but deadly on the road. Because a record can serve truth. >As county guard Silas Brandt enters the jail, Voss presses for removal, Oren's grief hardens, Mara refuses both denial and erasure, and Samuel's unsigned testimony becomes more dangerous by the hour, Jonah must decide what custody really means when the prisoner is guilty, necessary, and inconvenient to men with authority. The Living Record is a gripping Christian frontier western for readers who love legal suspense, marshal justice, railroad-town secrets, morally complex prisoners, dangerous testimony, and faith-rooted stories where mercy and judgment must both tell the whole truth. Ride back into Mercy Crossing-but keep the record whole. Some men are not erased because they are innocent. They are protected because truth still has breath in them.
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