Winter Prey

Winter Prey by John Sandford Page A

Book: Winter Prey by John Sandford Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Sandford
Tags: thriller, Suspense, Mystery, Adult
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pistol back into his pocket, got his hand back on the brake. If he’d had a shotgun, and he’d been in daylight, then it might have worked.
    He looked up at the truck and saw her profile, the blonde hair. So close.
    He slowed, slowed some more. She’d stopped pumping her brakes. He turned to look back, to check traffic. And suddenly the wall was there, in front of him. He jerked the sled to the right, squeezed the brake, leaned hard right, wrenched the machine up the side of the ditch. A block of frozen snow caught him, and the machine spun out into the road and stalled.
    He sat in the sudden silence, out of breath, heart pounding. The Forest Road intersection: he’d forgotten all about it. If he’d kept moving on her, he’d have hit the ends of the steel culvert pipes. He’d be dead. He looked at the embankment, the cold moving into his stomach. Too close. He shook his head, cranked the sled and turned toward home. He looked back before he started out, saw her taillights disappear around a curve. He’d have to go back for her. And soon. Plan it this time. Think it out.

    Weather saw the snowmobile slow and fall back. Forest Road flashed past and she came up on the highway. He must have read her taillights. She’d seen the road-crossing sign in her headlights, realized she wouldn’t have time to stop, to warn him, and had frantically pumped her brakes, hoping he’d catch on.
    And he had.
    Okay. She saw his taillight come up, just a pinprick of red in the darkness, and touched the preset channel selector on her radio. Duluth public radio was playing Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik.
    Now about Davenport.
    They really needed to talk again. And that might take some planning.
    She smiled to herself. She hadn’t felt like this for a while.

CHAPTER

4
    Lucas followed Carr down the dark, snow-packed highway. A logging truck, six huge logs chained to the trailer, pelted past them and enveloped them in a hurricane of loose snow. Carr got his right wheels in the deep snow on the shoulder, nearly didn’t make it out. A minute later, a snowplow pushed glumly past them, then a pod of snowmobiles.
    He leaned over the steering wheel, tense, peering into the dark. The night seemed to eat up their headlights. They got past the snowplow and the highway opened up for a moment. He groped in the storage bin under the arm rest, found a tape, shoved it in the tape player. Joe Cocker came up, singing “Black-Eyed Blues.”

    Lucas felt like he was waking from an opium dream, spiderwebs and dust blowing off his brain. He’d come back from New York and a brutal manhunt. In Minneapolis, he’d found . . . nothing. Nothing to do but work for money and amuse himself.
    In September he’d left the Cities for two weeks of muskie fishing at his Wisconsin cabin east of Hayward. He’d never gone back. He’d called, kept in touch with his programmers,but could never quite get back to the new office. The latest in desktop computers waited for him, a six-hundred-dollar swivel chair, an art print on the wall beside the mounted muskie.
    He’d stayed in the north and fought the winter. October had been cold. On Halloween, a winter storm had blown in from the southern Rockies. Before it was done, there were twenty inches of snow on the ground, with drifts five and six feet high.
    The cold continued through November, with little flurries and the occasional nasty squall. Two or three inches of new snow accumulated almost every week. Then, on the Friday after Thanksgiving, another major storm swept through, dumping a foot of additional snow. The local papers called it Halloween II and reported that half the winter snowplow budget had been used. Winter was still four weeks away.
    December was cold, with off-and-on snow. Then, on January second and third, a blizzard swept the North Woods. Halloween III. When it ended, thirty-four more inches of snow had been piled on the rest. The drifts lapped around the eaves of lakeside cabins.
    People said,

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