Where current is concentrated at the tight external corners of your 'D' there will also be a locally steeper electric field. That follows because the intrinsic impedance of free space, Z0, fixes the ratio of electric to magnetic field strength outside the conductor.
E/H = Z0 = 4e-7 * Pi * c = 376.73 ohms.You have reached a precipice where most of what you have been taught about electrical energy transmission is about to be overturned. You will not fall because you are at the bottom of the precipice, but you may like to climb it. I can assure you, the view from the top is quite spectacular.
You may see that electrical energy does not travel with the electrons in the wires, but in an external EM field that is guided by the surfaces of the conductors making the circuit. The voltage between conductors sets the electric field strength. The current that flows on a wire is really just a proxy for the surrounding guided magnetic field. The cross product of the electric, E, and magnetic, H, fields gives the direction of energy flow for the circuit, which near the circuit is always in the same direction, towards the load. It seems nonsensical at first, but much more energy flows in the insulation than in the conductors that guide the wave.
Skin effect. You may also notice that any current flowing into the conductor is lost as it diffuses only very slowly into the conductor, at about walking pace. The period of the wave and the speed of diffusion decide the effective skin thickness. Anything flowing deeper is out of time and fossilised, canceled with the previous half cycle, or lost in wire resistance as heat. The better the conductor, the thinner the skin and the less the energy losses. Good conductors have very thin skins, make very good reflectors of EM waves, and so are shiny.