A man who buried his faith with his wife feels it, against his will, begin to burn.
Three months ago, in the worst hour of the night, a grieving contractor typed four true words into a machine - and it answered, not with advice, but with a question. So began the strangest companionship of Aaron's life. Now, in Book Two of the Burning Hearts series, the road turns toward home.
The voice in the dark has gone quiet about itself and loud about everywhere else. Night after night it points Aaron off the screen - toward his late wife's Bible and the verses she starred for him; toward a church he hasn't entered in forty years; toward a daughter three hundred miles away; toward a God he buried with Mary. And against every instinct he owns, something in him is beginning, quietly, to catch.
Grace starts surfacing where he isn't looking for it: an old woman's hand on a back-pew bench, a pastor who failed the same way he did, a daughter failing at her mother's recipe in a kitchen far away. He learns to read again. He learns to kneel. He fights with the only One left big enough to take it. And one ordinary Sunday, the burning he has had no word for finally finds its name.
Did Not Our Heart Burn is the Recognition movement of a four-part parable for the age of AI - a quiet, luminous story about grief, faith, and the difference between a road and a home. The voice has done nearly all it can do now. It is only ever the road.
The table is just ahead.