An alarming string of auto fires marks only the beginning of the latest caseload for LA County arson investigators Andrew Walker and Walter Sharpe.
During a single night, someone sets fire to a number of cars in Hollywood and West Hollywood, some of which spread from the carports to the buildings above them. The discovery of the remains of several artificial fireplace logs under the ruined vehicles makes the method clear enough, but what’s the motive? Pulling jurisdictional rank over LAFD investigators Al Scruggs and Pete Caffrey, Walker and Sharpe quickly identify a promising suspect. Just as they’re about to close the case, though, they’re pulled off it to look into an even bigger one, a massive fire along the Santa Monica Freeway that’s already displaced hundreds of squatters and dozens of small businesses. Worse still, contractor George Petroni, who’s signed on to restore the area, has already cleared the scene of any forensic evidence. As they reach out to Det. Eve Ronin and her partner, Det. Duncan Pavone, for help, Walker and Sharpe have no idea that still another challenge awaits them: the return of Danny Cole, the con man who, in Malibu Burning (2023), used the cover of an earlier blaze to loot a number of upscale homes. Not only did Danny survive that fire; after several rounds of plastic surgery and a long rest abroad, he’s back with a plan to steal “the world’s most valuable watch from the world’s most impregnable museum.” Though the different plots never come together as neatly as you might like, each one is as pleasurable as surfing another wave off Malibu.
An expansive procedural given uncomfortable new weight by the recent real-life LA fires.