Charlie Johnson, semi-retired psychiatrist, homeward-bound by train from L.A., encounters Elaine Winters, his lover prior to his elopement 27 years earlier. Now Elaine Fogarty, wealthy and widowed, she lives a few miles from Charlie and his wife Jan in Santa Carlita, California. Elaine is hot to renew the relationship; Charlie is tempted, because Jan, still beautiful at 52, is bored with the marriage, and the two have little to do with each other, sexually or intellectually. But they're just getting by on his limited income, and divorce would be a financial disaster. Over coffee, Elaine is flattering and makes clear her interest in more than talk. Meanwhile at her clubCharlie's not a memberJan meets Raul Garcia, charming and 10 years her junior who says he's an Ecuadorian import-export consultant, and accepts his invitation to brunch. Charlie, against his better judgment, meets Elaine at her half million dollar apartment; after lunch she confirms his belief that women over 40 are sexiest. But some of her comments are strange; she claims Charlie's destined to be hers and urges him to get rid of Jan. He admits to dissatisfaction with his work, and Elaine assure him he'd never have to work if he threw in his lot with her. On county psychiatric wards, Charlie interviews psychotic patients, and its evident society has little defense against certain types of delusionaland dangerouspeople. "Fight fire with fire," Charlie advises a nurse. Captivated by Raul, Jan accepts his dinner invitation, and three weeks later, she and Raul spend the weekend together and become lovers, bringing joy and excitement to her life. Meanwhile Charlie's a regular visitor to Elaine's bed. But he's uneasy when she says God communicated to her that it's His will she have Charlie and displays her gun collection and boasts of her marksmanship. He tells Elaine that, much as Jan irks him, he can't bring himself to break with her, but if Jan left him, there'd be no problem. Elaine isn't the chance encounter Charlie thinks she is. She'd hired a detective agency to track him down, then arranged the encounter on the train. Now, to obtain more information on Jan and her lover, Raul, Elaine hires a PI, bi-cultural Jorge Hawkins. He gets the information but also uncovers reason to believe Elaine murdered her husband. And Raul's not a wealthy Ecuadorian. He's Ramon Gomez, former sales rep for a Puerto Rican pharmaceutical firm who, when offered a chance to make half a million by Orlando, a Colombian drug dealer, had persuaded four friends to each kick in $10,000. When Ramon caught his wife in bed with his best friend, he killed them both and absconded with the money. Now, funds low and thinking Jan, a doctor's wife, must have money, he arranged their meeting in hopes of swindling her. When he discovers the truth and Elaine offers him money to seduce Jan away from Charlie, Raul readily agrees. Charlie, "addicted" to Elaine, spends his free time with her, but chooses to ignore her increasingly bizarre statements. She describes her deal with Raul, but says, if he's unsuccessful, she as God's tool must kill Jan to carry out God's command that she have Charlie. Charlie finally admits to himself that Elaine's delusional and dangerous but merely urges her to rely on Raul's charm rather than her guns. She's insistent he break with Jan but grudgingly agrees to wait. Charlie tries to persuade Jan she should get away but can't bring himself to tell her the real reason: she'd be devastated if she learns Raul's true motive. Convinced Charlie wants to pose as a deserted husband and seize their property, Jan refuses to leave. In a restaurant, Raul and Jan are confronted by his former friendsnow sworn enemies who are, at the behest of Orlando, en route to arrange a drug deal in Mexico. Tumult ensues; Raul, pursued by revenge-minded Luis, Miguel, and Carlos, fle
Anne Duncan, 32 and divorced, is constrained by moralistic precepts inculcated by her dead father. She meets charming Scott Evans, impoverished college senior with a dazzling smile, but 10 years her junior. He invites her for coffee; she ends up paying for wine and cheesecake, epitomizing his approach to life. He claims a preference for older women, but the relationship remains platonic, despite a promising interlude in his condo. Then Scott runs off to Europe with another woman. Facing reality, she must find a way to earn more money. Best friend, Kathy Marlow recommends her to a small press in Tucson, but the venture fails. Anne ends up back in San Diego where Kathy introduces her to irreverent Teri Lawson. The two, similar in age but disparate in outlook, decide to share a place. A year later, Anne encounters Scott with Kathy. She'd avoided him after learning he was Kathy's lover and that, instead of going to medical school, he was working on a master's in psych. And he looks remarkably prosperous. Anne fills in for Kathy at Scott's Commencement. His change in fortune astounds her. He drives a Porsche and has an expensive condo in posh La Jolla. He's evasive about the source of his wealth but invites her to stay the night. Next day Anne complains to Teri that, when about to make love, she'd envision Kathy's face and freeze. Later she learns of Kathy's intention to break off with Scott. Teri cautions Anne that Scott's actions prove he thinks of no one but himself. Rejecting the warning, Anne goes to a jam session with Scott and has a good time, ignoring the fact his friends are surprised Scott isn't with his usual date, Adrienne. Lovemaking that night is all Anne had hoped for. Choosing to ignore his selfishness, Anne moves in with Scott. Kathy warns her about Adrienne, but Scott claims Adrienne merely helped furnish his townhouse. Scott is extremely generous; Anne can't imagine returning to her previous penurious life-style. Then he reveals the source of his wealth. He's blackmailing Adrienne, having chanced to get photos of her pushing her millionaire husband over the edge of Grand Canyon. His revelation shocks Anne but rather than endanger her life of luxury, she goes along with Scott. He insists she meet Adrienne who treats her abominably. Anne's shocked again when Teri's imprisoned for murdering her own lover. Thoughts of prison terrify Anne and are multiplied when she visits Teri in jail. Unable to face years in prison, Teri commits suicide. Devastated, Anne's grateful for Scott's support and agrees to a nostalgic trip to the Grand Canyon. She loves the Canyon and tells Scott how essential he is to her. That night his declaration of love thrills her. But next day they visit the spot where Adrienne murdered her husband. Scott gleefully recalls forcing Adrienne to strip and submit to sex. Except now she enjoys it. Enraged, Anne pushes him over the edge, then too late spots a man with a camera approaching. She shoves the surprised man aside and runs. Hurrying home to La Jolla, she she ferrets out hidden cash and incriminating photos of Adrienne. Fleeing to Mexico she's fluent in Spanish she ends up in La Paz. Convinced the whole thing is Adrienne's fault and, on the strength of the photos, she calls the woman and orders her to bring $100,000 in cash. When Anne goes to pick up the money, she finds not only Adrienne but Earl, the camera-carrying man she'd pushed down and, alive and well, Scott. He says she faces a long prison term for attempted murder. He offers her two choices: immediately submit to humiliating punishment from a vengeful Adrienne and then return to La Jolla as the older woman's maid or be left naked and penniless in Mexico, a fugitive from justice. Anne opts for the latter, but two Mexican peons happen along and, thinking her a whore, try to rape her. She's saved by the arrival of a limo carrying Julio Morena, Mario Fuentes, and Don Cesar Olivera. They provi
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.