New Release

Click to Order Now!

Journey to Riverbend is a novel set in the American west in the 1870’s. Michael Archer, a lay prison minister, witnesses the hanging of an innocent young man, Ben Carstairs. He takes on the mission of reconciling the deceased with his estranged father, Sam. The father’s kidnapping turns this journey of a prodigal by proxy into a dangerous quest.  The rescue hinges on Michael moving past his darkest secret and overcoming his greatest fear.

It will be published by Tyndale House in February, 2011

Chapter 1

April 10, 1878

The crowd was small for a hanging. Quieter than usual, as if they all knew justice would not be served today.

Michael Archer found it hard to look at the young man before him. Ben Carstairs, only twenty-two, stood like a boy grown too tall, too soon. Each strand of his sandy hair grew as if it had a mind of its own. Handcuffs encircled his fine-boned wrists in loops of heavy iron. His lips quivered. Fear raged in his brown eyes

“You believe I didn’t do it, don’t you?”

Michael’s throat tightened. He nodded. Many hours with the boy had convinced him of the young man’s innocence.

Ben gulped air and sighed. His shoulders sagged. He lifted his cuffed hands and opened a palm. “Give this to my father when you see him. It was my ma’s, and I wanted something of hers when he threw me out. Tell him I’m sorry.”

It was the silver Celtic cross Ben had worn on a leather thong around his neck. Only slight traces of the delicate engravings remained. Michael rubbed the cross as he had seen Ben do hundreds of times and closed his fist over Ben’s treasured token. Michael slipped it into his shirt pocket, buttoned the flap, and patted the cross with his hand.

“I will.”

Sheriff Gideon Parsons spoke from behind Ben. “It’s time, son.”

Ben swallowed, then straightened. “Thank you, Michael.”

Michael nodded, unable to speak. Gideon stepped in front and slipped a black hood over Ben’s head. The boy whimpered as Gideon put the noose in place and pulled it snug. He squeezed Ben’s shoulder. “It’ll be fast.” His voice cracked.

The trapdoor sprang down. Michael couldn’t look. A short, muffled sound from inside the hood ended in silence. Michael opened his eyes. The body swayed in a gentle arc, the head at an unnatural angle.

Gideon stood on the other side of the trapdoor, his hand still on the release lever, knuckles white, eyes downcast. He shook his large head and slid his hand from the lever. Wiping his face with a red bandana, he nodded to the undertakers, who stood like vultures beside the gallows. They moved with well-practiced efficiency to free the noose, lower the body into the plain pine casket, and load it onto the hearse.

Gideon walked over and stood next to Michael. “I feel rotten about this. It shouldn’ta happened.”

“I know. Thanks for asking the judge to reconsider.” Michael looked past the town toward the fields and the low-lying hills in the distance. Heaviness enveloped his heart like a wet blanket.

Gideon snorted. “Fat lot of good it did. The judge wanted proof, and we didn’t have any.”

“But you tried. Thanks for believing me.”

“Well, the whole thing never added up. It was either a frame-up or bad timing on young Carstairs’ part, but I couldn’t prove his innocence.” He looked skyward. “This is one of those times I hate this job.”