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9780060567118

Indelible

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780060567118

  • ISBN10:

    0060567112

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2010-12-22
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publications
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List Price: $7.99

Summary

The international bestselling author of "Kisscut" and "Blindsighted" shows off her superb talent with this brilliantly conceived, skillfully executed tale of a suspenseful hostage situation. "Crime fiction at its finest."--Michael Connelly.

Supplemental Materials

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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Excerpts

Indelible

Chapter One

8:55 A.M.

"Well, look what the cat dragged in," Marla Simms bellowed, givingSara a pointed look over her silver-rimmed bifocals. The secretary forthe police station held a magazine in her arthritic hands, but she set itaside, indicating she had plenty of time to talk.

Sara forced some cheer into her voice, though she had purposefullytimed her visit for Marla's coffee break. "Hey, Marla. How're youdoing?"

The old woman stared for a beat, a tinge of disapproval putting acrease in her naturally down-turned lips. Sara forced herself not tosquirm. Marla had taught the children's Sunday school class at thePrimitive Baptist from the day they opened the front doors, and shecould still put the fear of God into anyone in town who'd been bornafter 1952.

She kept her eyes locked on Sara. "Haven't seen you around herein a while."

"Hm," Sara offered, glancing over Marla's shoulder, trying to seeinto Jeffrey's office. His door was open but he was not behind hisdesk. The squad room was empty, which meant he was probably inthe back. Sara knew she should just walk behind the counter andfind him herself -- she had done it hundreds of times before -- but survivor's instinct kept her from crossing that bridge without first payingthe troll.

Marla sat back in her chair, her arms folded. "Nice day out," shesaid, her tone still casual.

Sara glanced out the door at Main Street, where heat made the asphaltlook wavy. The air this morning was humid enough to openevery pore on her body. "Sure is."

"And don't you look pretty this morning," Marla continued, indicatingthe linen dress Sara had chosen after going through nearlyevery item of clothing in her closet. "What's the occasion?"

"Nothing special," Sara lied. Before she knew what she was doing,she started to fidget with her briefcase, shifting from one foot to theother like she was four instead of nearly forty.

A glimmer of victory flashed in the older woman's eyes. She drewout the silence a bit more before asking, "How's your mama andthem?"

"Good," Sara answered, trying not to sound too circumspect. Shewasn't naive enough to believe that her private life was no one else'sbusiness -- in a county as small as Grant, Sara could barely sneezewithout the phone ringing from up the street with a helpful "Blessyou" -- but she would be damned if she'd make it easy for them togather their information.

"And your sister?"

Sara was about to respond when Brad Stephens saved her by trippingthrough the front door. The young patrolman caught himselfbefore he fell flat on his face, but the momentum popped his hat offhis head and onto the floor at Sara's feet. His gun belt and nightstickflopped under his arms like extra appendages. Behind him, a gaggleof prepubescent children squawked with laughter at his less-than-gracefulentrance.

"Oh," Brad said, looking at Sara, then back to the kids, then atSara again. He picked up his hat, brushing it off with more care thanwas warranted. She imagined he could not decide which was moreembarrassing: eight 10-year-olds laughing at his clumsiness or his formerpediatrician fighting an obvious smile of amusement.

Apparently, the latter was worse. He turned back to the group, hisvoice deeper than usual as if to assert some authority. "This, of course,is the station house, where we do business. Police business. Uh, andwe're in the lobby now." Brad glanced at Sara. To call the area wherethey stood a lobby was a bit of a stretch. The room was barely ten feetby eight, with a cement block wall opposite the glass door at the entrance.A row of photographs showing various squads in the GrantCounty police force lined the wall to Sara's right, a large portrait in thecenter showing Mac Anders, the only police officer in the history ofthe force who had been killed in the line of duty.

Across from the portrait gallery, Marla stood sentry behind a tallbeige laminate counter that separated visitors from the squad room.She was not a naturally short woman, but age had made her so bycrooking her body into a nearly perfect question mark. Her glasseswere usually halfway down the bridge of her nose, and Sara, whowore glasses to read, was always tempted to push them back up. Notthat Sara would ever do such a thing. For all Marla knew about everybodyand their neighbor -- and their dog -- in town, not much wasknown about her. She was a widow with no children. Her husbandhad died in the Second World War. She had always lived on Hemlock,which was two streets over from Sara's parents. She knitted and shetaught Sunday school and worked full-time at the station answeringphones and trying to make sense of the mountains of paperwork.These facts hardly offered great insight into Marla Simms. Still, Saraalways thought there had to be more to the life of a woman who hadlived some eighty-odd years, even if she'd lived all of them in the samehouse where she had been born.

Brad continued his tour of the station, pointing to the large, openroom behind Marla. "Back there's where the detectives and patrolofficers like myself conduct their business ... calls and whatnot. Talkingto witnesses, writing reports, typing stuff into the computer, and,uh ..." His voice trailed off as he finally noticed he was losing hisaudience. Most of the children could barely see over the counter.Even if they could, thirty empty desks spread out in rows of five withvarious sizes of filing cabinets between them were hardly attention grabbing. Sara imagined the kids were wishing they had stayed inschool today ...

Indelible. Copyright © by Karin Slaughter. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Excerpted from Indelible by Karin Slaughter
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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