there was even less she wanted to tell.
“I want any information you have.”
Click, and the call was over.
Abby was beginning to seriously dislike this man. What was worse, she was beginning to distrust him.
There might be some connection between Andrea Lowry and Jack Reynolds, but she didn’t think it had anything to do with housekeeping.
The Brayton Hotel was downtown. L.A.’s central library was right across the street. It had been a while since Abby had done any research there, the Internet having rendered it largely unnecessary to comb the stacks. But there were some items she couldn’t find online. On its Web site, the
L.A. Times
archived its articles as far back as 1985, but included no photos. It was the photos that interested her. The library would have the complete editions—text and pix—on microfilm.
She decided to head downtown early.
***
It took her ninety minutes of scrolling through microfilm, but she found it.
An article in the
Los Angeles Times
, dated July 14, 1991, about Orange County District Attorney John Reynolds. He hadn’t been Jack then. The populist persona appeared shortly afterward, upon his entry into politics.
The story was a puff piece, a human interest item on the D.A. at home. A tough man on the job, but tender with his kids, ages seven and five. There was a description of Reynolds flying a kite with the children on a windy bluff overlooking the ocean. Daddy at home making pancakes—“griddlecakes,” as he charmingly called them—on Sunday morning before packing the kids off to church. His wife Nora speaking of her hubby’s soft side.
But not to soften up the D.A. too much, there was also much talk of his stern dedication to the law. Asked if he had any hobbies, he answered, “I like to put people in jail.” It was reported that he said it with a smile.
Buried in the story was a brief acknowledgment of the real reason for the sudden interest in the life of a district attorney—rumors of a run for political office next year. The
Times
story was obviously a way of testing the waters, and of putting out a favorable impression of the potential candidate.
None of which mattered. All that interested Abby was the photograph accompanying the article. The Reynolds clan at home—husband, wife, kids ... and their housekeeper, Rose Moran.
Rose was in the background of the shot, serving up a plate of hot dogs at a family dinner in the backyard. In the fuzzy black-and-white photo her face was hard to make out. Abby fiddled with the knobs that controlled magnification and focus until the woman was centered in the microfilm reader’s blue crosshairs in blurry close-up. She had a sharp, thin face with narrow lips and close-set eyes.
Not Andrea Lowry. Even the passage of fifteen years could not turn this pinched bone structure into Andrea’s broader, squarer face.
There was no way Reynolds could have looked at Andrea Lowry and seen Rose Moran. His story was a lie. As lies went, it was a pretty good one, but not quite good enough.
Abby hated being lied to. It really frosted her corn flakes.
She fed a coin into the slot and printed out the page with the photo. Suddenly she was no longer worried about what she would say to Jack Reynolds. She had questions for him.
And she wanted answers.
8
Tess didn’t want to think about Abby. She wanted to forget she’d gotten the phone call last night. She wanted to put the whole thing out of her mind and make it go away.
This attitude sustained her during the first hour and a half of her workday, which began at eight fifteen with the weekly squad supervisors meeting. Her self-control continued when she returned to her office. It lasted long enough to allow her to dictate two letters and review three reports on ongoing investigations, sign out some mail, and initial a variety of paperwork, transferring it from her in-box to her out-box.
None of this was very glamorous, nothing at all like a day in the life an FBI agent
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