A real estate agent, Callum Caruthers, comes to talk to Erin, the owner of a 160-acre farm in Canada. Callum offers to buy the land from Erin in order to build a children's boarding school. Though he has come by three times to make an offer on the land, Erin has refused every time. She asks if there will be birth control for the students, if advertising will flood the campus and if it will be a private school--all conditions she has made on selling the land. Since it's a public-private partnership, Callum cannot make guarantees. In the middle of his most recent visit, a loud, white truck blazes by the residence and shoots at the property. When filing a police report for the incident, Callum learns that drive-by shootings with buckshot have been the norm for her for 5 years. She stands out in the local community because she supports a government program that provides food stamps, which allows her to sell her produce at lower rates and receive cheaper employees. Being queer and living alone in a large mansion also makes her a target, but on top of it all, she openly supports the masking program by the government to protect against COVID. Despite it all, Erin is barely fazed by the routine violence.