The book opens with a attack on Jim
Goodman by four wolves, inside the city of Otter Falls
where he lives and has a construction business.
The story then “backs up” to relate the events of his
sixteen years in Otter Falls, and his growing unease with
a lot of things that don’t add up in his mind. They range
from the corruption of the “good old boy” network in Otter
Falls to the Global Warming drumbeat.
He runs a guest editorial in the town’s newspaper,
questioning whether Global Warming is a real event, or a
lever being used to bring about a massive increase in the
size and control of government over everyone’s lives. He
relates that his father talked of the same causes being
cited as the reason for “Global Cooling” when he was in
school, and the strident predictions of a “New Ice Age.”
The editorial elicits a reaction way
beyond anything he ever dreamed. In response, he runs a
second guest editorial, defending his position and
expanding it. The response is even more violent. He has to
send his wife and two children into hiding. He sends them
to Carol Stream, Illinois, to stay with an old friend of
his wife’s for a time.
That’s when the wolves came. The morning after the attack,
in which he manages to kill all four wolves, he is en
route to report it to the police, when he discovers there
is no trace of the dead wolves, and all traces of blood,
etc., have been carefully covered over.
In seeking help and understanding,
Goodman is eventually referred to an attorney in Swenson
City. After checking his background, interviewing him,
etc., he confides in him that what he has seen is part of
a much larger and more sinister scheme than he has
imagined. A prominent gay rights activist, Cameron
Coolidge, who has become Assistant Secretary of Education
in the president’s cabinet, has arranged a “human
relations seminar” in the Otter Falls school district, at
which he will be the speaker. The thrust of the seminar is
the absolute necessity of all teachers, staff, and
administrators to make it a part of every class and every
school activity to actively teach that homosexuality is
right, normal, moral, etc. Any departure from that posture
will result in instant termination regardless of tenure,
etc. The Otter Falls School Board already has in hand a
resolution, personally written by Coolidge, that mandates
that policy. It is scheduled to be presented and voted on,
without reading or discussion, at a School Board meeting
the day following that seminar. There are already over a
hundred “facilitators” in place, and seminars scheduled in
nearly every school district in the nation, to follow suit
immediately, all across America. Otter Falls has been
chosen as the bell-weather place to begin, because it is a
conservative, western area. If it initiates this program,
its proponents can say, “See, even the most conservative
areas recognize this is good and right.”
Goodman is given copies of the
documents, leaked by someone in Coolidge’s Staff,
verifying the information. He runs a third editorial in
the Otter Falls newspaper, exposing the whole thing, and
(literally) all hell breaks loose.
A very sophisticated effort is made to seduce Jim into a
liaison in which it is planned for him to be video taped,
disgraced and discredited.
His daughter defies the “no cell phone” restriction in
their hiding location, they are discovered, and an attempt
is made on their lives.
Jim arranges to meet them in Minnesota, and drives to that
rendezvous. After a near-miss in that location, they think
they are safely away. At a rest stop, when his wife and
daughter emerge from the rest stop building, Jim sees a
demon-spawn creature coming at him to kill him. He is
barely stopped from trying to stop the creature with
bullets, when he spots a wedding ring on the monster’s
finger. That tips him off that it isn’t really a monster –
it’s his wife, that some evil force is trying to force him
to kill.
They return to Otter Falls, and Jim
learns the woman who failed to seduce him has been
brutally murdered.
He also learns, in a couple conversations with his
Minister, that all of the “crusades” going on in America
are, eventually, connected to the attacks of Satan against
all that God is, says, commands, and desires. While they
are not all part of any united “conspiracy” between the
people who are pushing them, they are all part of the
crusade against God. His Minister also shares that the
ultimate “spit-in-His-face” affront against God occurs
when homosexuality is accepted as a norm – thus distorting
and destroying the gift of sex God has given us in
marriage. That’s one of the very few vestiges of the
paradise of Eden that God has allowed us to keep.
Throughout human history, every civilization that has
reached a point of accepting homosexuality as right and
normal has been destroyed, either by an act of God, or by
God simply removing all protection from it. For that
reason, fighting the push to “normalize” homosexuality in
America is, in fact, a fight for the life of our
civilization. The importance of that battle to Satan is
reflected in the vehemence with which Jim’s stymying of
the plan for Otter Falls is met.
An attempt is made to kill his wife
with a bomb in her car. An attempt is made to force his
daughter to jump off a high bridge to escape being raped
and killed by another demon-spawn creature. It is there
that Jim realizes the importance of a warning he has
received from a spiritually discerning, Christian, Native
American woman in his congregation. Her warning was that
“He that is in us is stronger than he that is in the
world.” When he understands the meaning, Jim reaches to
swat the monster aside to save his daughter. When he
touches the monster, it explodes in a flash of light and
is gone.
An attempt is made to kill Jim with a
high-powered rifle. He manages to chase down the sniper,
who is also the one who murdered the woman, the one who
planted the bomb in his wife’s car, etc. It is revealed he
is the aide of Cameron Coolidge.
That revelation destroys Coolidge’s career in the federal
government, and the president throws him under the bus.
With his demonic and temporal resources exhausted, he sets
out to personally get revenge on Goodman. He fails, of
course – what kind of story would it be if the hero lost
the battle and the villain won?