A Navy Chaplain assigned to a company of United States Marines in the Middle East engages the enemy in a unique way. There are two battles waging, one physical and the other spiritual and Chaplain Leon Blue is a powerful warrier on both fronts. He embarks on a spiritual journey and begins to understand his true purpose.
The year is 1979. Mark Morris is only 12 years old, and has been recruited unwillingly to stop an ageless evil known only as “The Dark Man”. Can Mark and his friends battle a force that can’t be stopped by time or even death itself? Time is running out and the only help they will get is from beyond the grave. Their very souls rely on a baby – one that has been dead for over six decades… One that holds a horrible secret…
In the first of the stories a young girl-child is stolen by the gypsies. Yet they decide to give the child up, and they leave it in an out-house owned by a young clergyman. The latter isn't very pleased at this, but his wife certainly is, and they bring the child up. After a few years, and in a particularly tense moment, the true mother is found. An agreement is reached, whereby the child is shared. As with Amy Walton short stories, there is not only a well-told tale but also a moral.
A Navy Chaplain assigned to a company of United States Marines in the Middle East engages the enemy in a unique way. There are two battles waging, one physical and the other spiritual and Chaplain Leon Blue is a powerful warrier on both fronts. He embarks on a spiritual journey and begins to understand his true purpose.
The year is 1979. Mark Morris is only 12 years old, and has been recruited unwillingly to stop an ageless evil known only as “The Dark Man”. Can Mark and his friends battle a force that can’t be stopped by time or even death itself? Time is running out and the only help they will get is from beyond the grave. Their very souls rely on a baby – one that has been dead for over six decades… One that holds a horrible secret…
In the first of the stories a young girl-child is stolen by the gypsies. Yet they decide to give the child up, and they leave it in an out-house owned by a young clergyman. The latter isn't very pleased at this, but his wife certainly is, and they bring the child up. After a few years, and in a particularly tense moment, the true mother is found. An agreement is reached, whereby the child is shared. As with Amy Walton short stories, there is not only a well-told tale but also a moral.