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  Amber Morn 
 By Brandilyn Collins   Zondervan   Copyright © 2008   Brandilyn Collins 
All right reserved.  ISBN: 978-0-310-27641-8  
    Chapter One   Any man going on this mission wasn't coming back.  
     Cluttered kitchen, cluttered head. Kent Wicksell could hardly  think straight. It wasn't supposed to start like this. Dread anticipation  pumped through his veins as he faced off with his second  son. Vigilante Brad, gunning to take on the world. At twenty-nine,  he thought he knew more than anybody.  
     Kent's voice seethed. "For the fifteenth time-this job's for  me and Mitch. You are staying home. We ain't leaving your mom  alone."  
     They'd been arguing for the past ten minutes. Too long. They  needed to get out of there.  
     Brad stood his ground, face like granite. His cool blue eyes  stabbed Kent. "I ain't staying here." His voice pulsed low. "I  watched over T.J. since he was born, just as much as Mitch has.  And I ain't stopping now."  
     Kent surged forward two steps, finger punching the air. "I'm  telling you no! I won't let you-"  
     Lenora caught his arm. "Stop, Kent! Let him go."  
     He turned to her, jaw loosening. She stared back, a terrible,  grim determination pressing her lips. Kent's knees went weak.  
     No, no, no.  
     Where had that look on her face come from? Just this morning  she'd clutched at the knowledge she wouldn't be left by herself.  "You'd let him go?" Accusation heated Kent's cheeks. "You'd trade  two of your sons for another?"  
     She held his gaze until her chin trembled. "It's for T.J.," she  whispered. And she started to cry.  
     Kent's heart cracked. T.J.-their youngest son. Once their greatest hope. Smart. Well liked. Going somewhere in life. Never  did drugs.  
     "I got four fractured ribs," he'd told them in his weekly phone  call from prison two nights ago. Eyes swollen almost shut. A broken  arm. His words were racked with pain. An innocent eighteen-year-old  in prison, beaten-just for being there.  
     Of all three sons, this never should have happened to T.J.  
     At thirty-three, Mitch still lived at home, bouncing from job  to job, in and out of jail on various drug and burglary charges.  Meth was his latest drug of choice. Just last night he'd shot up  for this special event. To Mitch, the greatest day of his purposeless  life had dawned this morning. Rescue his littlest brother,  betrayed by injustice. Show the world he was worth something.  
     As for Brad, he was unpredictable. Angry. In jail twice for  beating on girlfriends. A high school dropout, like his dad.  
     Brad flicked his eyes from his mother back to Kent, his mouth  drawn in a victorious line. "Don't forget who went with you yesterday  on your scouting mission. Don't forget who took you to a  computer in the library and showed you the blog."  
     On Main Street in Kanner Lake they'd watched traffic, people.  Noted the police station two blocks up from Java Joint coffee  shop. They went into the café and ordered coffee and pastries.  Sat at a table, nerves taut, eyes roaming over the big front windows,  the layout and size of the place. Kent and Mitch took turns  walking down the back hall in search of the bathroom. They'd  noticed the other rooms off the hall-a small office, a storage  area. The rear door with no glass, a lock and deadbolt ...  
     Kent fixed his gaze on Lenora, watched her tears fall. It's for T.J.  
     No way. She'd lost enough. Brad was not walking out of here  and leaving her alone. Kent and Mitch would take Java Joint, just  like they'd planned. Kill every person in the place if they had to.  Brad would stay with his mother.  
     Mitch stormed into the kitchen, a Rambo expression on his  gaunt face. Wired for action. His pupils were huge. He swiveled  from Brad to Kent. "What're you doing standing here? We're late."  
     Kent planted his legs apart, hands on his hips. He wasn't  about to lose this battle. Bad way to start the day, and his hostages  would soon feel it. His anger was pumping all the harder-and  he'd have to let it out on somebody. "Your brother thinks he's  going." He aimed a burning stare at Brad. "I say he's not."  
     Brad's eyes narrowed. Without a word, without a backward  glance at his mother, he snatched up the lightweight jacket  he'd brought into the kitchen-a jacket with a bulging, heavy  pocket-and stalked out the front door toward the weapon-loaded  truck.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from Amber Morn by Brandilyn Collins  Copyright © 2008   by Brandilyn Collins.   Excerpted by permission.
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