The book opens with Meyer Landsman, an alcoholic
homicide detective with the Sitka police department, investigating the murder of a man in the hotel where Landsman lives. Beside the corpse lies an open cardboard
chess board with an unfinished game set up on it. Landsman calls his partner and cousin, half-
Tlingit, half-Jewish Berko Shemets, to help him investigate further. Upon filing a report on the murder at police headquarters, Landsman and Berko discover that Landsman's ex-wife Bina Gelbfish has been promoted to
commanding officer of their unit. Landsman's only other living family member is Berko's father Hertz, a war veteran and former federal agent who performed missions on behalf of the United States government before they
burned him. Landsman's chess-addicted father and cancer-stricken mother died before the events of the novel, as did his sister Naomi, a bush pilot who lost her life in a plane crash. Sitka is due to be "reverted" to the control of the state of Alaska in just a few weeks' time, leaving the status of Sitka, previously a semi-autonomous federal district governed by the Jews, in question. Berko has made plans for his family to stay legally, but Landsman has not. After consulting with Hertz and visiting several local chess clubs, who knew the victim as "Frank", Landsman and Berko discover that the victim was Mendel Shpilman, the son of the Verbover
rebbe, Sitka’s most powerful
organized crime boss. Many Jews believed Mendel to be the
Tzadik ha-Dor, the
potential messiah, born once in every generation. Mendel was addicted to heroin and both of his parents abandoned him; despite this, the family decides to throw a public funeral with the help of the Verbover lawyer, Aryeh Baronshteyn. As Meyer continues to investigate Mendel's murder, he discovers that the supposed "chosen one" had taken a flight with Naomi. He follows Naomi's trail to a mysterious set of buildings with an unknown purpose, set up in Tlingit territory by Jews. Landsman flies there to investigate; he is knocked out and thrown in a cell, whose walls have graffiti in Naomi's handwriting. Landsman is soon woken up by Baronshteyn and a doctor who claims that they are in a legitimate rehabilitation center. Landsman attacks his captor and is able to escape. The near naked and injured Landsman is soon rescued by a local Tlingit police chief, Willie Dick, who reunites him with Berko. The duo visit Hertz, where Hertz and Berko have a confrontation over Hertz's role in a
race riot that led to the death of Berko's mother. Hertz attempts suicide by shooting himself in the head and is rushed to the hospital. Back in Sitka, they learn that the mysterious complex is operated by a paramilitary group who wants to build a
new Temple in Jerusalem after destroying the
Dome of the Rock, hoping to speed the birth of the Messiah. An evangelical
Christian Zionist American government supports the group. As Landsman and Berko investigate, the News reports the Dome being bombed. American agents apprehend the detectives and offer them permission to stay in Sitka, if they agree to keep quiet about the plot they have uncovered. Landsman says that he will and is released. Landsman reunites with Bina, frustrated by his failure with the Shpilman case. Remembering the chess board, he suddenly realizes that it's not an unfinished game, but a
chess problem: he had seen the same problem from the perspective of the other player in Hertz's house. Landsman and Bina visit a recovering Hertz at Berko's home, and he confesses to killing Mendel at Mendel's own request hoping to ruin the government's plans to bring upon the
Messiah. Landsman contacts American journalist Brennan stating that he "has a story for him". The reader is left wondering if Landsman is planning to expose Hertz's involvement in Shpilman's murder or the complex messianic conspiracy. ==Origins and writing==