Stolen Prey

Stolen Prey by John Sandford Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Stolen Prey by John Sandford Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Sandford
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Mystery & Detective, Crime
stuff. Killing families, sexual mutilation. Chopping off fingers, one joint at a time. They tend to go down shooting.”
    “You definitely think it looks Mexican?”
    “Oh, yeah, absolutely. Don’t see it up here, much, but this would be routine in Mexico,” O’Brien said. “We’d love to get one of their killers alive, if we could. Turn him over to the Federales for questioning.”
    “We plan to do that up here,” Lucas said. “The questioning.”
    “You’d get more answers from the Federales,” O’Brien said, persisting with the thought. “The LCN supposedly caught a Federale undercover cop and skinned him alive. Sent his skin to his boss, by FedEx, with a movie of the guy getting skinned. If we extradite one of these guys, to the right Federales, we will definitely get some answers.”
    “I don’t think we’d want to do that,” Lucas said.
    “Whatever, it’s your call,” O’Brien said. “Anyway, we’re gonna get there a little late. Maybe talk tomorrow?”
    “I’ll fix things up with the lead investigator,” Lucas said. “See you then.”
    T HINKING ABOUT the ATM robbers, Lucas called a list of county agents, missed a couple who were out of their offices, finally connected with one, and was told that there might be a list of some commercial riding stables, but a lot of stables were run off the books, as side ventures, and coming up with a complete list would be tough.
    An opaque piece of the underground economy, Lucas thought, when he hung up. He ran into it all the time now; small businessmen had told him that government taxation and regulation had become so rapacious that cheating was often the only way they could survive.
    Another step down to a third-world economy.
    D EL CAME BACK at three o’clock from a surveillance job in Apple Valley, pulled a chair around, and asked, “Why don’t you turn on a light?”
    “Forgot,” Lucas said. “Anything happening with Anderson?”
    “Not on my shift. Maybe he knows we’re watching.”
    Terrill Anderson was suspected of stealing a three-ton Paul Manship bronze art-deco sculpture,
Naiads of the North
, from the front driveway circle of a home in Sunfish Lake, a town just southof St. Paul. The sculpture depicted three larger-than-life-sized nymphs dancing, flowers in their hair, hands joined overhead, standing in a kind of swirl, or whirlpool, of walleyes.
    The owner of the sculpture, the fifth-generation heir of a railroad family, was massively rich, and had a daughter who chaired the state arts council. He wanted his sculpture back—the estimated worth, as a sculpture, was four million dollars. Looked at another way, three tons of bronze, which was mostly copper, was worth roughly eighteen thousand dollars if it had been in ingot form, or fifteen thousand or so on the scrap metal market.
    The sculpture had been fitted to a granite base with six large steel bolts. Anderson had unbolted the statues and lifted the whole thing onto a flatbed trailer with a trailer-mounted crane, one night while the owner was inspecting a new home in Rio. The operation had been caught on a murky piece of low-res surveillance video from a house across the street—the heir’s own camera lenses had been covered with pink goop before the removal began.
    Phone calls were made, and the hunt for the statues, or, more realistically now, the bronze scrap metal, which had been somewhat desultory, had sharpened. Somewhere, out there, maybe, Anderson was hiding a flatbed trailer and a lot of heavy metal. Del was watching him, waiting for him to go fetch it.
    Lucas yawned, scratched the back of his head. “Hope he didn’t drop it in a lake.”
    “He’s probably already shipped it to China,” Del said. “It’s possible that he had a boxcar waiting, loaded it right off the flatbed, and shipped it out. I’ve been talking to the railroad, but those guys have got no idea where most of their cars are, or what’s in them. Which I guess is a good

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