Marcia Clark - Guilt By Degrees

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Someone has been watching D.A. Rachel Knight-someone who's Rachel's equal in brains, but with more malicious intentions. It began when a near-impossible case fell into Rachel's lap, the suspectless homicide of a homeless man. In the face of courthouse backbiting and a gauzy web of clues, Rachel is determined to deliver justice. She's got back-up: tough-as-nails Detective Bailey Keller. As Rachel and Bailey stir things up, they're shocked to uncover a connection with the vicious murder of an LAPD cop a year earlier. Something tells Rachel someone knows the truth, someone who'd kill to keep it secret.
Harrowing, smart, and riotously entertaining, GUILT BY DEGREES is a thrilling ride through the world of LA courts with the unforgettable Rachel Knight.

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“Yeah,” he replied. “But I’m not so sure he needs to impress you. I don’t think your buddy Charlie Fern’s gonna go to bat for you, and I don’t think you’ve got much else.”

Time for my trump card. I did my best to play it with a little flourish. “No, not much else,” I said. “Except the blood on his sleeve.”

Walter fell silent. I held my breath.

He inhaled sharply. “Okay, listen. When I say it’s over, everyone stops. Understood? No pushing.”

I tried to keep the triumphant note out of my voice. “You’ve got my word, Walter. I’ll be so civilized, you won’t even believe it’s me.”

Walter sighed. “I hope I’m not making the biggest mistake of my career.”

I reassured him he wasn’t. And I wasn’t lying. How should I know what mistakes he’d made in the past? There might’ve been some real whoppers. Surely this wouldn’t be the biggest.

“And, Rachel, for what it’s worth?” he said.

“Yeah.”

“I really think this guy is innocent.”

“Yeah, yeah, Walter,” I replied lightly. “That’s what they all say.”

“So cynical, so young,” he clucked.

We agreed to meet at Bauchet Street-the Men’s Central Jail-at noon the following day. I ended the call, then turned a gloating face to Bailey.

She shook her head. “Damn. I cannot believe you pulled that off.”

“Better work some overtime, Keller,” I said, grinning. “This round’s gonna hurt.”

Bailey shook her head again and we got out of the car. I called Melia and told her I wouldn’t be coming back tonight.

“Oh…yeah. You’re out in the field, right?” she asked.

“I love how you put it all together, Melia. Especially since I told you I was going out to a crime scene before I left.”

“Oh, right.”

Fantastic. It was comforting to know that if I got nailed checking out a crime scene, no one would even know I’d left the office till some hiker found my body. There were wonderful secretaries in the DA’s office. I wondered for the millionth time why we couldn’t have gotten one of them.

13

Angel, thedoorman, greeted us as he opened the heavy glass-and-iron door. “Evening, ladies.”

“Hey, Angel,” I replied. “Keeping warm?”

“Had to break out my thermals.”

Though L.A. never got the kind of cold you’d find in the Midwest or on the East Coast, it could definitely get nippy enough to seep into your bones after a while. And unlike back East or the Midwest, builders out here never took heating and insulation all that seriously. This meant that the great indoors provided no real relief.

“I could lend you my Spanx,” I replied. “That’ll heat you up.”

“Plus it’ll smooth you out,” Bailey observed.

Angel rolled his eyes and stepped back outside.

We made our way through the magnificently spacious lobby, our footsteps echoing on the henna-colored marble floors, then muted as we stepped onto the thick Oriental rugs. I reached the bar first and grasped the solid-brass handle to pull the door open. The electric fire in the brick hearth glowed warmly, casting an orange light on the forest-green-leather wingback chairs and mahogany tables. It was already fairly crowded with financial-district types and corporate lawyers-no cops or prosecutors, now or ever. Bailey and I took seats at the end of the bar. Drew looked, as always, like he’d stepped out of GQ, dressed in the usual white shirt and black vest that accentuated his broad shoulders and narrow waist, the diamond stud earring flashing brightly against his black skin. He poured from a silver martini shaker into four glasses on a tray, wiped his hands on the bar towel, and came down to greet us.

“The most beautiful women in the world have arrived,” he said, somehow making the statement feel entirely plausible.

“And how are we tonight?” he asked.

“Tired,” Bailey said.

They exchanged an obnoxiously sweet smile.

“And thirsty,” I said pointedly.

“Graden joining us?” he asked me, referring to Lieutenant Graden Hales.

The common wisdom among female deputy DAs is never fall for a cop. Sure, they can be smart, handsome, sexy as hell. But they’re almost guaranteed to be dogs who’ll cheat on you with your sister and then tell all their buddies at the station. Lieutenant Graden Hales, whom I’d met when he got assigned to investigate the murder of my dear friend and fellow Special Trials prosecutor Jake Pahlmeyer about a year ago, seemed to be the exception. His hazel eyes; sandy-brown hair; wide, strong cheekbones; and full lips more than delivered on the handsome-and-sexy quotient. But as far as I could tell, there was no dog in him. He seemed to be an honest-to-God decent guy who wanted a relationship with a real woman, not just some arm candy.

And unbelievably, to top it off, he was rich-filthy rich, to be exact. Though I didn’t know much about his early life, I did know his wasn’t family money. Before he figured out what he wanted to be when he grew up, Graden had worked a minimum-wage job for a construction company. As a hobby, just for the fun of it, he dreamed up video games. But once he got hired by the LAPD, he decided he didn’t have the time or the desire for games anymore. So just before he finished the police academy, he put together one last game: Code Three-police jargon for a sirens-on emergency. Had it been up to him, that game never would’ve seen the light of day. But fortunately for Graden, his younger brother, Devon, a computer whizbang, saw the potential in this last creation and decided to write up the software and see if anyone was interested. Five years later, Code Three hit the gaming world like a tsunami, setting Graden and Devon up for life.

Graden and I had been dating for months, but I wasn’t ready to pick out any china patterns. Toni likes to call me commitment challenged. I like to tell her that’s the pot calling the kettle African-American. Though she hides it well, I know she finds this hilarious every time I say it.

I answered Drew with a shake of my head. “Graden’s ‘bonding’ with his brother tonight.”

Drew nodded, then favored Bailey with a slow, sexy smile. “How was your day, baby?” That voice had surely undressed enough women to populate a small country.

“Okay,” she replied, her voice so silky, she practically purred. Hell, men at the end of the bar started loosening their ties. It was enough to turn your stomach. “And what about you? Did you talk to the bank today?”

Drew had been working on getting a small-business loan for his bar.

“I did,” Drew replied. “So far, so good.” He held up crossed fingers. “So, ladies, the usual?”

“Sure,” Bailey replied, managing to give the word two syllables.

They exchanged another sappy smile.

“No,” I replied. “I’ll have a shot of Pepto-Bismol.”

They both laughed.

“I wasn’t kidding,” I said.

They smiled, apparently unconcerned that their “sweet nothings” had caused a bilious “something” to rise in the back of my throat.

I fixed them with a steely glare. “I guess I’ll let you pay off your bet now after all.” I gave Bailey a smug look. “I’ll have a Russian Standard Platinum martini, straight up with a twist.” It was one of the most expensive vodkas in the house.

Bailey’s expression turned dour. I smiled back sweetly.

I take my revenge very dry and very cold.

14

The onlydownside to a meeting at the Los Angeles County Men’s Central Jail was that I’d have to go to the Los Angeles County Men’s Central Jail. Entering the dank, sprawling concrete monstrosity, the largest county jail in the world, always made me feel like I was walking through the seventh gate of hell. The mixture of disinfectant, sweat, and misery lingered in my nostrils for days, and it took just as long to get the echoes of clanging metal doors and gates out of my head.

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