past to the man who was trying to catch her rapist and her husbandâs killer? A man who was trying to help her? There could only be one reason. Angela Jakes must have something in her past that she was ashamed of. Deeply ashamed of. The obvious thought popped into Dannyâs mind:
Had she been a hooker back in the day? Was that the âunhappy lifeâ Andrew Jakes had rescued her from?
It was a familiar enough story in L.A.: young, beautiful, small-town girl comes to Hollywood with dreams of making it as an actress. Falls on hard times. Hooks up with the wrong crowdâ¦
Yet whenever Danny pictured that angelic face, those eyes so full of trust and goodness, he couldnât bring himself to believe that Andrew Jakes had picked up his bride on Hollywood Boulevard. He hadnât believed Angela Jakes was a gold digger either, even when all the evidence pointed to it. I was right about that. I gotta trust my instincts more.
But what were his instincts telling him now?
That was the problem. He had no idea.
After leaving the high school yesterday, heâd driven around for an hour, trying to figure out his next move. The obvious way to go would have been to drive back to Lyle Renaltoâs place and confront Angela on the spot. With any other witness, Danny wouldnât have thought twice. But he couldnât bring himself to grill the lovely Mrs. Jakes in front of her odious attorney, who would doubtless insist on remaining glued to her side. If she did have guilty secrets, and who of us didnât, she deserved a chance to confess them in private. Danny would understand. After everything sheâd just been through, he owed her that much sensitivity at least.
So instead Danny had driven back to the station house to brainstorm with the rest of the team. Only it was actually more of a shit storm. Every lead his men had been chasing seemed to have turned into a dead end. Henningâs Venice art expert had come up with a big fat doughnut on the miniatures. The insurance scam angle looked less and less promising, as the only people who could possibly benefit from a staged robbery would be the Jakeses themselves, one of whom was dead, while the other hadgiven away all her money. Two of Dannyâs officers had been checking out the lucky charities on the receiving end of Angela Jakesâs generosity. Both seemed totally kosher, with sparklingly transparent accounts. A sophisticated computer program had gone through every violent rape in the L.A. area in the past five years, looking for any connection with art or jewelry thefts, or any connection at all that might link one of those suspects to the Jakes crime scene. Nothing. It was the same story with forensics. Prints: nothing. Semen analysis: nothing.
Danny pulled on a pair of sweatpants and stumbled into the kitchen to fix himself a strong cup of coffee. It was still dark outside. The tree-lined, suburban street in West Hollywood where Danny had lived for the past six years was empty and as silent as the grave. Was Angela still asleep? Danny pictured her, dark hair spilling over a soft white pillow, her glorious body warm and naked beneath Lyle Renaltoâs sheets. Was she in the guest bedroom? Christ, he hoped so.
He remembered Lyleâs contemptuous comment at the hospital: âFor a detective, youâre a pretty poor judge of people. Angela and I arenât lovers.â
Detective Danny McGuire hoped with all his heart that Renaltoâs words were true.
He looked at his watch: 5:20.
If I drive over there now, theyâll still be asleep. I can see for myself which beds were slept in.
He jumped into the shower.
Â
I T WAS SIX A.M. ON THE dot. The same uniformed maid who had been on duty yesterday answered the door. Danny thought, Poor woman. How early does she have to be at work?
The maid looked at Danny and thought, Poor man. How early does he have to be at work?
âIâm looking for Mrs. Jakes.â
âMrs. Jakes