From Storm Prey, Chapter One
Three of them, hard men carrying nylon bags, wearing work jackets, Carhartts and Levis, all of them with facial hair. They walked across the parking structure to the steel security door, heads swiveling, checking the corners and the overheads, steam flowing from their mouths, into the icy air, one of the men on a cell phone.
As they got to the door, it popped open, and a fourth man, who’d been on the other end of the cell-phone call, let them through. The fourth man was tall and thin, dark-complected, with a black brush mustache. He wore a knee-length black raincoat that he’d bought at a Goodwill store two days earlier, and black pants. He scanned the parking structure, saw nothing moving, pulled the door shut, made sure of the lock.
“This way,” he snapped.
Inside, they moved fast, reducing their exposure, should someone unexpectedly come along. No one should, at the ass-end of the hospital, at fifteen minutes after five o’clock on a bitterly cold winter morning. They threaded through a maze of service corridors until the tall man said, “Here.”
Here was a storage closet. He opened it with a key. Inside, a pile of blue, double-extra-large orderly uniforms sat on a medical cart.
The hard men dumped their coats on the floor, and pulled the uniforms over their street clothes. Not a big disguise, but they weren’t meant to be seen close-up -- just enough to slip past a video camera. One of them, the biggest one, hopped up on the cart, lay down and said, “Look, I’m dead,” and laughed at his joke. The tall man could smell the bourbon on the joker’s breath.
“Shut the fuck up,” said one of the others, but not in an unkindly way.
The tall man said, “Don’t be stupid,” and there was nothing kind in his voice. When they were ready, they looked at each other and the tall man pulled a white cotton blanket over the man on the cart, and one of the men said, “Let’s do it.”
“Check yourself...”
“We don’t hurt anyone,” the tall man said. The sentiment reflected not compassion, but calculation: robbery got X amount of attention, injuries got X-cubed.
“Yeah, yeah...” One of the men pulled a semi-automatic pistol from his belt, a heavy, blued, no-bullshit Beretta, stolen from the Army National Guard in Milwaukee, checked it, stuck it back in his belt. He said, “Okay? Everybody got his mask? Okay. Let’s go.”
They stuffed the ski masks into their belts and two hard men pushed the cart into the corridor. The tall man led them further through the narrow, tiled hallways, then said, “Here’s the camera.”
The two men pushing the cart turned sideways, as the tall man told them to, and went through a cross-corridor. A security camera peered down the hall at them. If a guard happened to be looking at the monitor at that moment, he would have seen only the backs of two orderlies, and a lump on the cart. The tall man in the raincoat scrambled along, on his hands and knees, on the far side of the cart.
© 2010 by John Sandford
Lucas Davenport, fast-driving, sharp-dressing investigator with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, is the rock star of John Sandford’s Prey novels. And Storm Prey, the 20th thrill ride in the series, is the reason we keep coming back.
In the wee hours of a bitter cold morning, three thugs who’ve just busted a hospital pharmacy go tearing out of the parking garage and nearly crash into an attractive woman entering the structure. Later, a news story on the break-in announces that a bound and badly beaten pharmacy employee has died, leaving the burglars facing murder charges and wondering: Did the looker they saw get a good look at them?
It doesn’t take long for a doctor in on the heist to figure out that the potential witness is Weather Karkinnen, the surgeon/wife of Lucas Davenport, a big-deal detective who isn’t afraid to shoot first and ask questions later. What’s more, Davenport has called in his posse of top cops to make sure she’s surrounded at all times. Now that would have been a good move if the artless band of bandits decided to take a crack at her themselves. But knowing their limits, they’ve hired a stone-cold killer to make sure this new operation is a success….
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Putnam Pub Group ( May 18, 2010 )
Item #: 37-6158
ISBN: 9780399156496
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.5 x 0.94 inches
Product Weight: 15.0 ounces

Enjoyed this novel. Keeps your interest throughout. Although I've read Prey novels I've liked more, this one is definitely worth your time.
Reviewer: vickid
Thought this book was great!! Cant wait for next one.
Reviewer: jerry s
i have read all of the prey books. This last one was really good. Some twists and held my interest throughout the book.
Reviewer: Lynn M
For me, one of the signs of a good book is the inability to find another book afterwards as a follow-up. I began reading "Storm Prey" while on vacation in SC and became so engrossed in it, I lost all track of time and ended up with a sunburn from staying on the beach too long. Although I could've done without the sunburn, of course, it was almost worth it -- the book was just that good!
Reviewer: Andrea
John Sandford is such a good writer. If you're looking for books with many twists and turns and complicated plots, then this author is not for you. It's an easy read with good characters. His Virgil Flowers series is excellent also!
Reviewer: Stacey H