After
That Night, by Karin Slaughter.
I’ve
done it again: started reading a series
at the end instead of the beginning, to my eternal shame. Ms Slaughter’s latest book is advertised as a
Will Trent thriller and I thought ‘no problem – there will be a backstory’. And there is, but so many Will Trent novels
have preceded this one, with so many truly great permanent characters, that I
spent most of the time while I read trying to figure out relationships,
friendships and families, and my lasting regret is that I’ve missed out (unless
I trawl through the Will Trent Canon, and will I live that long?) on a
continuing story that embodies perfectly the thriller genre. Even though I’m lacking in previous details,
especially concerning Will Trent’s early life, I’m so fortunate to finally meet
him. Better late than never!
GBI special agent Will Trent is engaged to Sara Linton, a
brilliant Doctor who is working in the Emergency Department of an Atlanta
hospital. They are planning their
wedding in a month’s time and both are thrilled to be starting their new life
together, until a young woman is brought into the E.D. in terrible
condition. She has driven a late-model
Mercedes very gently into an ambulance parked outside the hospital, then
collapsed. Her injuries are horrific and
eventually fatal despite everyone’s efforts, but it is also obvious that she
has been brutally raped. Which awakens
terrible memories for Sara: fifteen
years ago, the same terrible, animal thing happened to her, and after that
night, nothing in her life would ever be the same, including injuries so bad
she can never have children.
But that’s not all.
An investigation turns up cold cases, rapes and fatalities that remain
unsolved, all involving young women of approximately the same age, usually
students – with the same knife-markings on certain parts of their bodies – and always missing a
left shoe: the cases are all connected,
but actual evidence is thin on the ground, until Sara and Will piece together
fragile clues linking her assault and the dying girl with the Mercedes, all
linking however tenuously to a group of her fellow medical students, now
prosperous specialists, trailblazers in medicine and powerful men in their own
right – but spectacular failures in their personal lives. They took the Hippocratic Oath: they pledged to do no harm. They couldn’t be mixed up in this sadistic
cruelty: could they?
Ms Slaughter leads us competently through the story,
never letting the reader up on the suspense and examining sometimes minutely
the sacrifices that people (particularly parents) will make for those they love
– and those they don’t: think medical
staff and police. As always she gives us
HEAPS to think about – and regret: wish
I’d read all the backstories! FIVE STARS.
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