Pieces of Her: The stunning new thriller from the No. 1 global bestselling author. Karin Slaughter

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Pieces of Her: The stunning new thriller from the No. 1 global bestselling author - Karin  Slaughter

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of the house. The garage. Just get out, okay? You can’t sleep there tonight.”

      “Mom—”

      Laura hissed in air between her teeth as she tried again to find a comfortable position. “Andrea, please don’t argue with me. I need to be alone tonight. And tomorrow, and—you just need to go. I’ve looked after you for thirty-one years. I’ve earned the right to be alone.”

      “But—” Andy didn’t know what the but was.

      But people are dead.

      But you could’ve died.

      But you killed somebody when you didn’t have to.

       Didn’t you?

      Laura said, “My mind is made up. Go downstairs and make sure your father knows the right entrance to pull up to.”

      Gordon had picked them up at the hospital before. “Mom—”

      “Andrea! Can’t you just for once do something I tell you to do?”

      Andy wanted to cover her ears. She had never in her life felt this much coldness from her mother. There was a giant, frozen gulf between them.

      Laura’s teeth were clenched. “Go.”

      Andy turned on her heel and walked away from her mother. Tears streamed down her face. She had heard that same edge to her mother’s voice twice today, and each time, her body had responded before her mind could shut her down.

      Gordon was nowhere in sight, but Detective Palazzolo was waiting for the elevator. The woman opened her mouth to speak. Andy kept walking. She took the stairs. Her feet stumbled over the treads. She was numb. Her head was spinning. Tears rolled like rain.

      Move out? Tonight?

      As in now? As in forever?

      Andy bit her lip so that she would stop crying. She had to keep it together at least until she saw her dad. Gordon would fix this. He would make it better. He would have a plan. He would be able to explain what the hell had happened to her kind, caring mother.

      Andy picked up the pace, practically flinging herself down the stairs. The anvil on her chest lifted the tiniest bit. There had to be a reason Laura was acting like this. Stress. Anesthesia. Grief. Fear. Pain. Any one of these things could bring out the worst in a person. All of them wrapped together could make them go crazy.

      That was it.

      Laura just needed time.

      Andy felt her breathing start to calm. She rounded the stairs at the next landing. Her sweaty hand slipped on the railing. One foot hit sideways on the tread, the other foot slipped out from under her and she found herself flat on her ass.

       Fuck.

      Andy put her head in her hands. Something wet slid down the back of her fingers that was too thick to be sweat.

       Fuck!

      Her knuckle was bleeding. She put it in her mouth. She could feel her hands trembling. Her brain was spinning inside her head. Something weird was happening with her heartbeat.

      Above her, a door opened, then closed, then there were scuffling footsteps on the stairs.

      Andy tested her ankle, which, remarkably, was fine. Her knee felt wonky but nothing was sprained or broken. She stood up, ready to head down to the ground floor, but a wave of nausea spun up her throat.

      Above her, the footsteps were getting closer.

      It was bad enough to vomit in a public place. The only thing worse was having a witness. Andy had to find a bathroom. At the next landing, she pushed open the door and sprinted down another hallway until she found the toilets.

      She had to run to make it to the stall in time. She opened her mouth and waited to throw up but now that she was here, squatting in front of the toilet bowl, the only thing that came up was bile.

      Andy horked out as much as she could before flushing the toilet. She sat down on the closed lid. She used the back of her hand to wipe her mouth. Sweat dripped down her neck. She was breathing like she’d run a marathon.

      “Andrea?”

       Fuck.

      Her legs retracted like a roller shade, heels hooked onto the edge of the toilet bowl, as if drawing herself into a ball would make her invisible.

      “Andrea?” Palazzolo’s chunky police-issue shoes thumped across the tiles. She stopped directly in front of Andy’s stall.

      Andy stared at the door. A faucet was dripping. She counted off six drops before—

      “Andrea, I know you’re in there.”

      Andy rolled her eyes at the stupidity of the situation.

      “I gather you don’t like to talk,” Palazzolo said. “So maybe you could just listen?”

      Andy waited.

      “Your mom might be in a lot of trouble.” Palazzolo waited another beat. “Or not.”

      Andy’s heart leapt at the possibility of the not.

      “What she did—I get that. She was protecting her daughter. I’ve got a kid. I would do anything for the little guy. He’s my baby.”

      Andy bit her bottom lip.

      “I can help you with this. Help you both get out of this.”

      Andy waited again.

      “I’m going to leave my card here on the counter.”

      Andy kept waiting.

      “You call me, anytime, day or night, and together, you and I can figure out what you need to say to make this problem go away.” She paused. “I’m offering to help your mom, Andrea. That’s all I want to do—help.”

      Andy rolled her eyes again. She had learned a long time ago that one of the prices of prolonged silence was people assumed that you were simple-minded or outright stupid.

      “But here’s the thing: if you really want to help your mom,” Palazzolo tried. “First you have to tell me the truth. About what happened.”

      Andy almost laughed.

      “Then we’ll go from there. All right?” Another weighted pause. “Right?”

       Right.

      “Card’s on the counter, doll. Day or night.”

      Andy listened to the drips from the faucet.

       One drip … two drips … three … four … five … six …

      “You wanna make a gesture, like flush the toilet

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