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Buried Prey By John Sandford

Buried Prey

by John Sandford

Mem. Ed. $15.99

Pub. Ed. $27.95

You pay $0.20

Buried Prey

The first machines on the site were the wreckers, like steel dinosaurs, plucking and pulling at the houses with jaws that ripped off chimneys, shingles, dormers, and eaves, clapboard and brick and stone and masonry, beams and stairs and balconies and joists, headers and doorjambs.
Old dreams, dead ambitions, and lost lives, remembrance roses and spring lilacs, went in the dump trucks all together. When the wrecking was done, the diggers came in, cutting a gash in the black-and-tan soil that stretched down a city block. A dozen pieces of heavy equipment crawled down its length, Bobcats and Caterpillar D6s and Mack trucks, and one orange Kubota, grunting and struggling through the raw earth.
Now gone silent as death.
The equipment operators gathered in twos and threes, yellow helmets and deerskin work gloves, jeans and rough shirts, to talk about the situation. Slabs of concrete lay around the trench, pieces of what once had been basement floors and walls. Electric wire was gathered in hoops, pushed into a corner of the hole, to await removal; survey stakes marked the lines where new concrete would go in.
None of it happening today.
At one end of the gash, twelve men and four women gathered around a bundle of plastic sheeting, once clear, now a pinkish-yellow with age. It was still set down in the earth, but the dirt on top of it had been swept away by hand. A few of the people were construction supervisors, marked by yellow, white, and orange hard hats. The rest were cops. One of the cops, whose name was Hote, and who was Minneapolis’s sole cold-case investigator, was kneeling at the end of the bundle with her face four inches from the plastic.
Two dead girls grinned back at her, through the plastic, their desiccated skin pulled tight over their cheek and jaw bones, their foreheads; their eyes were black pits, their lips were flattened scars, but their teeth were as white and shiny as the day they were murdered.
Hote looked up and said, “It’s them. I’m pretty sure. Sealed in there.”
The day was hot, hardly a cloud in the sky, the July sun burning down; but the soil was cool and damp, and smelled of rotted roots and a bit of sewage, from the torn-up sewer lines leading out of the hole. Another woman, who’d walked into the pit in low heels and two-hundred-dollar black wool slacks that were now flecked with the tan earth, asked, “Can you tell what happened? Were they dead when they were sealed in?”
Hote stood up and brushed the dirt from her jeans and said, “I think so. It looks to me like they were hanged.”
“Strangled?”
“Hanged,” Hote repeated. “There appears to be some upward displacement of the cervical spine in both girls—but that’s looking through a lot of plastic. Their arms go behind them, instead of lying by their sides, so I think they’ll be tied or cuffed.
Anyway—let’s get them over to the ME.”
“What else?”


Copyright © 2011 by John Sandford

Buried Prey

In John Sandford’s 21st Prey novel, the white-knuckle tension begins at an excavation site where workers have unearthed the bodies of two young girls, their skeletal faces smiling eerily through a plastic shroud. Davenport instantly knows who they are: the Jones sisters, kidnapped nearly 20 years ago. The killer was never found. At least, that’s how Lucas saw it then, when he worked the case as a rookie.

In a flashback to 1985, Davenport is still in uniform and hot to get his detective badge. He proves himself more than able to his mentor, Quentin Daniel, who later becomes chief of police, when he tracks down a suspect in the girls’ abduction. But the man, a mentally unstable vagrant, is shot and killed before he can be questioned. But while Daniel is satisfied they got their man, Lucas held to the belief that someone got away with murder.

As Buried Prey fast-forwards to the present, Lucas uses his considerable clout to light a fire under a case that should have been labeled cold all those years ago. But as things start heating up, tragedy strikes close to home, and guilt and anger could cloud Lucas’ judgment just when he needs it most....

Hardcover Book : 400 pages

Publisher: Putnam Pub Group ( May 10, 2011 )

Item #: 13-338084

ISBN: 9780399157387

Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.9inches

Product Weight: 15.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Right on
January 25, 2013

Another interesting ride with Lucas Davenport; another "well done" in the Prey series for Sanford. Especially liked the give & take between Lucas & Del - realistic dialogue. Sanford got a little off-track a few books back and I almost gave up on him, but thank goodness he settled down with Lucas again. Prefer straight forward stories rather than have to dig through fillers (what people are eating, etc. that serve no purpose) that some authors use, or be titilated with silly sex fillers added for voyeurs who don't have the disapline to enjoy simplly a good, well written story.

Reviewer: Rose

Great MysterY !
July 03, 2012

First time reading John Sanford but certainly not the last. I'm a fan. Lots of twists and turns and surprises...that's what I like.

Reviewer: Marshabanville

Boring!
October 01, 2011

This is the most boring John Sanfod book I have ever read!

Reviewer: Sandy

love Lucas!
September 12, 2011

This was one of the better Prey books. There was more of "Lucas Action". He was more involved in the story line than the last couple of Prey books. I just did not get my fill of Lucas in the previous book, but this one was more like the beginning books of this series. LOVE,LOVE,LOVE Lucas.

Reviewer: Barbara

love Lucas!
September 12, 2011

This was one of the better Prey books. There was more of "Lucas Action". He was more involved in the story line than the last couple of Prey books. I just did not get my fill of Lucas in the previous book, but this one was more like the beginning books of this series. LOVE,LOVE,LOVE Lucas.

Reviewer: Barbara

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