As twilight descended on Ferguson, Missouri, for a third consecutive night after the killing of Michael Brown Jr. by a police officer, Gwendolyn DeLoach Packnett could no longer hold her peace.
Each day since the killing on Aug. 9, 2014, she had watched her daughter, Brittany, leave the safety of home to protest the grotesque manner in which the 18-year-old Brown had been treated, his body lying in the street for hours, as if in a warning to the community.
The previous night had been particularly brutal: Officers hurled tear gas which Brittany had inhaled. Police officers atop tanks pointed their rifles at protesters. Gwendolyn DeLoach Packnett had seen enough.
''My mom was, like, ‘I just really would rather you stay home,''' Brittany recalled. ''She was, ‘I know that you're passionate about this, I know that you're angry, but I need you to stay home tonight.'''
''And I remember thinking to myself, ‘I don't even know how to stay home.'''
The decision to leave that night against her mother's wishes, and subsequent decisions she made to become a national leader in the movement for police accountability for Brown's death, reflects not just the story of one activist fulfilling her purpose and finding her voice.
In its own way, Packnett's rise to be one of her generation's best-known racial justice activists also reflects the promise and power of the ministry of her late father, the Rev. Ronald B. Packnett, who was senior pastor of St. Louis' historic Central Baptist Church.
The Rev. Packnett's organizing and activism extended into the street, said his friends and family interviewed for this story.