SPOILER ALERT
Archer Mayor is a very skilled storyteller. In this convoluted and creative second of the series, Lt. Joe Gunther of the Battleboro Police in Vermont, accepts a temporary job working for State's Attorney Ron Potter in a small town in the Northeast Kingdom. He is going to stay with his Uncle Buster in Gannet, looking for a renewal of good childhood memories and fleeing his troubled, shaky relationship with Gail Zigman. They are not communicating and he tells her he is leaving on the night before. While he is going to investigate the embezzlement of funds in another town, he becomes embroiled in the tensions and problems of Gannet almost immediately. His memories certainly don't include the odd houses and peculiarly dressed individuals in town. The Order, a cult, has bought many of the homes, established a restaurant, The Kingdom, having seduced the community in the beginning with money and friendship. They worship nature, do not believe in electricity, cars or money and all wear quilted suits. They share sexual partners, and the children. They have become isolated and apart from community activities. The local community doesn't like them and bad feelings are mounting, especially from Greta Lynn who owns the huge and decrepit Rocky River Inn, a hotel/bar/cafe and her home. Everyone is aware that she is holding on only slightly to her business, and she blames the Order.
There is a confrontation soon after he arrives between members of the Order and Bruce and Ellie Wingate who have traced their daughter to the Order, and are demanding to see her, determined to return her home, though she is 21. She does not want to see them. Wingate forces his way into one of the homes, inhabited by Fox (Ed Sylvester), Dandelion and three children. Fox throws Wingate out a window. The next night there is a fire and Fox's burns down, with Fox wrapped around the makeshift stove that started the fire when knocked over, and the four others killed from smoke inhalation. They were huddled together on a bed upstairs, locked into the room, the key on the outside. Rennie and Joe with the Scott-Packs for air go into the fire, and nearly lose their lives in an explosion. Deemed a suspicious fire, it becomes an investigation of the State Police led by Crofter Smith, with Joe a "guest" participant. When Wingate is stabbed to death, it appears that Joe's lifelong friend Rennie Wilson is the main suspect. His lighter was under the body, his boot tracks are at the scene, and the knife and bloody clothes and boots are found in his Home. He is on the run, looking even more guilty, though Joe doubts his guilt. More and more of the State's police are brought in. The town blames the cult and tensions increase, again fomented by Greta. Wingate had revealed they found their daughter through a private investigator and now have a consultant involved, Paul Gorman, CEO of FTC, Freedom to Choose, an organization that deprograms individuals after cult participation. He acts as go between for Ellie, who refused to take a lie detector test, while Bruce's was inconclusive.
The process of the investigation is complex and while there is a surfeit of clues and evidence, some of it doesn't make sense to Joe or to Detective Sergeant Lester Spinney of the St. Johnsburg BCI, and part of the State Major Crimes Squad. They team up. Joe looks into Julie's life at home and school and talks to Dr. Ruth Kaufman, a professor who specializes in cult behavior and knows a lot about the Order, and a psychiatrist Dr. Barb Barrett. Bruce Wingate had been a control freak, never letting Julie or Ellie out of his control, yelling at her teachers when he believes they are doing a bad job. He finds out that Julie had had episode of extreme anger while at school, destroying property, and harming herself. When they discover that Gorman was at the scene and a witness to Bruce's murder they arrest him, though he cannot identify the person who wielded the knife; Julie was there. The killer was tall and lean. Shortly after, following a meeting of Rennie and Julie Rennie is brutally murdered in the forest. Joe has learned that while Rennie was supposedly playing cards with a friend, Pete Chaney, every Wednesday night, he was in fact having sex with a score of women from the Order, an arrangement he had made with Edward Sarris, including Julie. He clearly had something on Sarris, for that to happen.
Joe is seeing more and more of what might have happened and as they are interviewing Sarris, who is tall and lean, he realizes they have made a mistake. They go back to talk to Nadine, Rennie wife. She is in a wheelchair as a result of a fall down the stairs. In their interview they determine that she and her brother Earle Renaud had a father who was domineering and abusive. Buster had been a buffer for some of the violence. But Earle hated Rennie because Rennie had pushed Nadine down the stairs when he was drunk and angry. No one understands the relationship that Nadine and Rennie had, that they loved one another and accommodated one another's needs. They move to the home where Earle lives, outsmart and arrest him.
It remains now to determine who killed Bruce Wingate. When they return to Sarris, who finally acknowledges what Joe suspects that Rennie held a secret that would have ruined Sarris's group and business. In his relationship with Julie he had found out that the child that had fallen from the bridge three years earlier was actually murdered, and Sarris had covered it up. The child had been retarded; he had been Julie's child (She had gotten pregnant by Fox when he was at her university recruiting; he had fallen in love with her, and she had lived in his home with him, and she had killed him because he was not perfect. Fox and Julie's relationship was a practice not supported by the beliefs of the Order, who did not allow committed partners.) Sarris has also let Julie go, having given her one of the cars the Order kept. As they follow her, again using Lt John Bishop as tracker when her vehicle is located, they are drawn to the granite quarries for which Vermont is so famous. Most of the party follow Bishop; John moves down the road and then follows prints on a side road that lead to the quarry. Joe then sees the possibility of their plan to get away, Julie and Rennie's killer through a gap in the quarry bowl. He heads down the treacherous sides to find the person, and to intervene in what appears to be an ambush to kill the men who followed Julie's trail, as they descend into the quarry. He tries to kill the man who is inside one of the huts on the side, and is shot at, granite particles nearly blinding him and hitting him in the side. He manages to follow, seeing that it is Fox who did not die in the fire, and pulls the ladder Fox is on away from the rock, and Fox falls to his death. They determine that the night of the fire, a new recruit was in Fox's house, Fox was away. When Wingate went to the house to get Julie, he takes Dandeion and the children hostage, locking them in the the room. Julie has her father's gun and shoots at her father but hits the recruit in the neck. He falls down the stairs onto the stove, the embers smoldering for awhile producing the lethal smoke that killed the hostages. Fox realizes he has an opportunity to get away with Julie. He wears Rennie's clothing and boots, and plants the evidence to frame him. Sarris is arrested for covering up the child's murder. As Joe recovers, he and Buster reminisce about Garret's past and how it and the community will survive. Gail is coming up to see him, and they will begin a new chapter in their relationship.
The theme of control and domineering, abusive parents, who sometimes instill a deep anger in their children is used throughout this story. Julie was a product of such a home as was Earle Renaud. They can be particularly susceptible to cults, the military or other highly organized and controlled environments, trying to lose themselves. This is a provocative tale that haunted me long after I finished it. It moved me to think about the mob mentality that arose among the members of Gannet as Greta makes wrong assumptions and accuses those she hates without proof. She is desperate to save her business and to maintain some authority in the town. The poverty and fear of the community plays into the intentions of others. Mayor is brilliant in setting the atmosphere on a dying community among the beauty of the state; the foreboding of the story, beginning with the scene of the deer that he stops along the highway to admire and watches shot by a hunter. He goes after the man, furious at the loss of power and beauty of the animal, yelling that the act was illegal beside a highway. He then is stopped by the hunter shooting at him as a warning, and he realizes the hunter was after the food that would sustain him and his family through the bitter winter. A compelling set-up to the multiple views of the events to come, and the need to move slowly and with thought before rushing to judgement and action. And it's about survival in all its applications.