Police Chief Josie Gray returns after a one-book hiatus to lock horns with a survivalist cult that’s taken root in her hometown of Artemis, Texas.
Wayne Masters, who’s reinvented himself as Gideon, the charismatic leader of The Drummers, maintains that his community of some 20 adults and children, which has purchased a decrepit church building for a dollar, only wants to be left alone. But when a suspicious series of transformer fires leaves the whole town without electricity, the finger of suspicion points at The Drummers. When the deputation serving a warrant for parole violation on Drummer Clyde Hamblin arrives at the church, they’re met with gunfire. And by the time the confrontation has ended, 15-year-old Mandy Seneck is dead inside. Gideon insists she’s been shot by Josie, who returned the fire from outside, though the ballistics render his claim manifestly impossible. Ex-Marine Leon Spinner, who’s grown more and more disenchanted with his leader, is sure that Gideon has killed Mandy himself to cover his abuse of her. As The Drummers splinter into pro- and contra-Gideon factions, Josie and her force work patiently to uncover an ever spreading network of connections between The Drummers, the dealer who supplied their guns, the terrorist saboteurs of the EX-Sovereigns, who seem to be using them as pawns in their much more ambitious and nefarious plans, and Josie’s own mother, whom Josie finds connected to Gideon in a most embarrassing way.
The inventive, deepening twists make this comeback read like a superior episode of Law & Order: West Texas.