A Slippery Slope

For some time, I had been thinking about writing a book where the antagonist was initially a good person.  This  good person stepped over “the line.”  Why or how would that happen?

There are many ways. Perhaps by accident. Or maybe he or she got tricked.  Certainly a person could yield to the temptation, cross the line, then regret it.  Of course, someone might talk the person into the action, make it sound not so bad, perhaps even a good thing, or for a good cause. And fifty other reasons.

Then what?

In my newest book, Political Dirty Trick, a thirty-five-year-old woman gets talked into an illegal act by George. Recently divorced, Ginnie is looking for something to occupy her dull and empty life. She joins an election committee as a volunteer.  George,  an experienced volunteer, relates to her in private that their candidate doesn’t have a chance at winning.  But, a good dirty trick on the opponent, Ron Drake, could drag down his support amongst the voters. Ginnie gets enthusiastic about the possibility. The problem is, the opponent is such a straight shooter, they can’t find anything to expose about him.

Ginnie laments there is nothing they can do and they are just backing a certain loser. George says they could manufacture something. He suggests they could steal a valuable painting from Drake and put it in a storage unit rented under his name. When later they let it be found, Drake will get lots of negative publicity.  And if he had already collected the insurance money for the painting, his poll numbers would definitely tank.

Ginnie says stealing is wrong. But George convinces her that they are not really stealing.  They are putting it in a storage unit under Drake’s name, so they aren’t keeping it. They are just moving it from Drake’s house to his storage unit. Ginnie is reluctant, but eventually gives in and says she will “relocate” the painting if George can rent the unit under Drake’s name.

But things don’t go as planned and a man is killed during the robbery. While it was an accident, it occurred during the commission of a felony. That can carry the death penalty. When Ginnie finds she could be tried for capital murder, she decides she will not be caught, whatever that takes.

Ginnie has stepped over the line, and the slope on the other side is slippery. Each thing she does makes the slope steeper and slipperier. Now, she will do whatever it takes to avoid being caught. Anyone she perceives threatens her freedom will pay dearly.

Political Dirty Trick follows Ginnie’s progress on the slippery slope. Crystal Moore, the protagonist, is just trying to help her friend, Ron Drake. But that puts her on a collision path with Ginnie.

Political Dirty Trick, A Crystal Moore Suspense, Book #3, is available on Kindle now at:   https://amzn.to/2pIHMqs. Next week it will be available in paperback, with the hardcover version following a week later.

I’d love to hear your comments on the slippery slope and how a person might get caught on it.  Thanks. And I’ll select one who leaves a comment and send them a copy of Political Dirty Trick.

8 thoughts on “A Slippery Slope

  1. Sounds like an intriguing premise for a story — and you are just the author to do justice to this tangled web your character has gotten herself entangled in.

  2. “Oh what a tangled web we weave….” I think most people are essentially moral and upstanding (my husband says I’m the eternal optimist); however, given the right influences good people do bad things. I like this premise! I know it will do well for you!

    • Thanks for the nice comment, Dana. I think most people are essentially moral. But that still leaves many who are not. And when they weigh what it might cost them to do the right thing, well … they might be able to justify NOT doing the right thing.

  3. I understand how Ginnie could be convinced to do wrong to achieve her desired goal. I think, though, that most people are inherently guided by their morality and would not continue down the ‘slippery slope’ to such and evil end as she does. Ginnie is the exception. Perhaps she was not as ‘good’ as she appears in the beginning and has some underlying pathological tendencies that lead her into her following behavior. It was a great book, however. I enjoyed it and I think anyone interested in politics and current events would also enjoy reading it. Good job.

    • Oh, how often are we not as good as we think we are – or even what other people might think. Only when people are really tested can we (they) know just how “good” they really are. Thanks for the good comment, Elaine

  4. Hey Jim,
    I have to compliment you on your cover. Really nice. Congrats on your new release. I recently watched a show on Netflix about how easily people can be convinced to do things they wouldn’t normally do. Sounds as if Ginnie falls into that category. I hope it sells a million copies!
    ~Ann

    • Thank you, Ann. I didn’t see that program, but I agree with the idea. Many people can be convinced of almost anything. I appreciate your comment – particularly about selling a million copies. With your help, and others like you, it could happen.

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