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Eyes of Prey [Mass Market Paperback]

John Sandford
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 12.50
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Book Description

Mar 6 2007 Prey (Book 3)
Number-one New York Times bestselling author John Sandford pits Lieutenant Lucas Davenport against two killers, men as different as night and day-except in the method of their madness. It's all in the eyes...

Frequently Bought Together

Eyes of Prey + Shadow Prey + Rules of Prey
Price For All Three: CDN$ 30.63

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  • Shadow Prey CDN$ 9.89

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Product Description

About the Author

John Sandford is the author of twenty-two Prey novels, most recently Stolen Prey; the Virgil Flowers novels, most recently Shock Wave; and six other books. He lives in Minnesota.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

1

Carlo Druze was a stone killer.

He sauntered down the old, gritty sidewalk with its cracked, uneven paving blocks, under the bare- branched oaks. He was acutely aware of his surroundings. Back around the corner, near his car, the odor of cigar smoke hung in the cold night air; a hundred feet farther along, he’d touched a pool of fragrance, deodorant or cheap perfume. A Mötley Crüe song beat down from a second- story bedroom: plainly audible on the sidewalk, it had to be deafening inside.

Two blocks ahead, to the right, a translucent cream-colored shade came down in a lighted window. He watched the window, but nothing else moved. A vagrant snowflake drifted past, then another.

Druze could kill without feeling, but he wasn’t stupid. He took care: he would not spend his life in prison. So he strolled, hands in his pockets, a man at his leisure. Watching. Feeling. The collar of his ski jacket rose to his ears on the sides, to his nose in the front. A watch cap rode low on his forehead. If he met anyone— a dog-walker, a night jogger— they’d get nothing but eyes.

From the mouth of the alley, he could see the target house and the garage behind it. Nobody in the alley, nothing moving. A few garbage cans, like battered plastic toadstools, waited to be taken inside. Four windows were lit on the ground floor of the target house, two more up above. The garage was dark.

Druze didn’t look around; he was too good an actor. It wasn’t likely that a neighbor was watching, but who could know? An old man, lonely, standing at his window, a linen shawl around his narrow shoulders . . . Druze could see him in his mind’s eye, and was wary: the people here had money, and Druze was a stranger in the dark. An out- of- place furtiveness, like a bad line on the stage, would be noticed. The cops were only a minute away.

With a casual step, then, rather than a sudden move, Druze turned into the darker world of the alley and walked down to the garage. It was connected to the house by a glassed- in breezeway. The door at the end of the breezeway would not be locked; it led straight into the kitchen.

“If she’s not in the kitchen, she’ll be in the recreation room, watching television,” Bekker had said. Bekker had been aglow, his face pulsing with the heat of uncontrolled pleasure. He’d drawn the floor plan on a sheet of notebook paper and traced the hallways with the point of his pencil. The pencil had trembled on the paper, leaving a shaky worm trail in graphite. “Christ, I wish I could be there to see it.”



Druze took the key out of his pocket, pulled it out by its string. He’d tied the string to a belt loop, so there’d be no chance he’d lose the key in the house. He reached out to the doorknob with his gloved left hand, tried it. Locked. The key opened it easily. He shut the door behind him and stood in the dark, listening. A scurrying? A mouse in the loft? The sound of the wind brushing over the shingles. He waited, listening.

Druze was a troll. He had been burned as a child. Some nights, bad nights, the memories ran uncontrollably through his head, and he’d doze, wretchedly, twisting in the blankets, knowing what was coming, afraid. He’d wake in his childhood bed, the fire on him. On his hands, his face, running like liquid, in his nose, his hair, his mother screaming, throwing water and milk, his father flapping his arms, shouting, ineffectual . . .

They hadn’t taken him to the hospital until the next day. His mother had smeared lard on him, hoping not to pay, as Druze howled through the night. But in the morning light, when they’d seen his nose, they took him.

He was four weeks in the county hospital, shrieking with pain as the nurses put him through the baths and the peels, as the doctors did the skin transplants. They’d harvested the skin from his thighs— he remembered the word, all these years later, harvested, it stuck in his mind like a tick— and used it to patch his face.

When they’d finished he looked better, but not good. The features of his face seemed fused together, as though an invisible nylon stocking were pulled over his head. His skin was no better, a patchwork of leather, off- color, pebbled, like a quilted football. His nose had been fixed, as best the doctors could, but it was too short, his nostrils flaring straight out, like black headlights. His lips were stiff and thin, and dried easily. He licked them, unconsciously, his tongue flicking out every few seconds with a lizard’s touch.

The doctors had given him the new face, but his eyes were his own.

His eyes were flat black and opaque, like weathered paint on the eyes of a cigar- store Indian. New acquaintances sometimes thought he was blind, but he was not. His eyes were the mirror of his soul: Druze hadn’t had one since the night of the burning. . . .



The garage was silent. Nobody called out, no telephone rang. Druze tucked the key into his pants pocket and took a black four-inch milled-aluminum penlight out of his jacket. With the light’s narrow beam, he skirted the car and picked his way through the litter of the garage. Bekker had warned him of this: the woman was a gardener. The unused half of the garage was littered with shovels, rakes, hoes, garden trowels, red clay pots, both broken and whole, sacks of fertilizer and partial bales of peat moss. A power cultivator sat next to a lawn mower and a snowblower. The place smelled half of earth and half of gasoline, a pungent, yeasty mixture that pulled him back to his childhood. Druze had grown up on a farm, poor, living in a trailer with a propane tank, closer to the chicken coop than the main house. He knew about kitchen gardens, old, oil- leaking machinery and the stink of manure.

The door between the garage and the breezeway was closed but not locked. The breezeway itself was six feet wide and as cluttered as the garage. “She uses it as a spring greenhouse— watch the tomato flats on the south side, they’ll be all over the place,” Bekker had said. “You’ll need the light, but she won’t be able to see it from either the kitchen or the recreation room. Check the windows on the left. That’s the study, and she could see you from there— but she won’t be in the study. She never is. You’ll be okay.”

Bekker was a meticulous planner, delighted with his own precise work. As he led Druze through the floor plan with his pencil, he’d stopped once to laugh. His laugh was his worst feature, Druze decided. Harsh, scratching, it sounded like the squawk of a crow pursued by owls. . . .

Druze walked easily through the breezeway, stepping precisely toward the lighted window in the door at the end of the passage. He was bulky but not fat. He was, in fact, an athlete: he could juggle, he could dance, he could balance on a rope; he could jump in the air and click his heels and land lightly enough that the audience could hear the click alone, like a spoken word. Midway through, he heard a voice and paused.

A voice, singing. Sweet, naive, like a high- school chorister’s. A woman, the words muffled. He recognized the tune but didn’t know its name. Something from the sixties. A Joan Baez song maybe. The focus was getting tighter. He didn’t doubt that he could do her. Killing Stephanie Bekker would be no more difficult than chopping off a chicken’s head or slitting the throat of a baby pig. Just a shoat, he said to himself. It’s all meat. . . .



Druze had done another murder, years earlier. He’d told Bekker about it, over a beer. It wasn’t a confession, simply a story. And now, so many years later, the killing seemed more like an accident than a murder. Even less than that: like a scene from a half- forgotten drive- in movie, a movie where you couldn’t remember the end. A girl in a New York flophouse. A hooker maybe, a druggie for sure. She gave him some shit. Nobody cared, so he killed her. Almost as an experiment, to see if it would rouse some feeling in him. It hadn’t.

He never knew the hooker’s name, doubted that he could even find the flophouse, if it still existed. At this date, he probably couldn’t figure out what week of the year it had been: the summer, sometime, everything hot and stinking, the smell of spoiled milk and rotting lettuce in sidewalk Dumpsters . . .

“Didn’t bother me,” he had told Bekker, who pressed him. “It wasn’t like . . . Shit, it wasn’t like anything. Shut the bitch up, that’s for sure.”

“Did you hit her? In the face?” Bekker had been intent, the eyes of science. It was, Druze thought, the moment they had become friends. He remembered it with perfect clarity: the bar, the scent of cigarette smoke, four college kids on the other side of the aisle, sitting around a pizza, laughing at inanities . . . Bekker had worn an apricot- colored mohair sweater, a favorite, that framed his face.

“Bounced her off a wall, swinging her,” Druze had said, wanting to impress. Another new feeling. “When she went down, I got on her back, got an arm around her neck, and jerk . . . that was it. Neck just went pop. Sounded like when you bite into a piece of gristle. I put my pants on, walked but the door. . . .”

“Scared?”

“No. Not after I was out of the p...


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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Gruesome, and yet excellent!!! Jan 10 2003
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The eyes, they just had to go. If not, they would haunt you long after the vicims were dead and buried. Cutting them out, that's the ticket. The murder of a well known lady in the town shocks everyone...
When Detective Lucas Davenport gets the case, he's not sure he can do it. After recent butal cases, these nasty murders is not what he needs. The eyes is the worst part... Davenport soon realize that he's up against an evil man with a twisted mind and a facination for death, but yet very intelligent. Trying to catch this person will be hard...
This is one of John Sandford's first books in the Prey Series (#4). And he shows with this book that he's a great writer. His way of adding twists and caputring you right from the start is only a couple of the things that makes him great. The killer of Eyes of Prey can, to a certain extent, even be compared to Hannibal Lector. The gross almost rituals and the horrible acts. Sandfords way of describing the way the characters think, their desires and their way of acting is unique!
Once you're started reading the book you're trapped. No way to get out until you're done with the book. Highly recommended to anyone who loves other Prey-books, and thrillers!!
Was this review helpful to you?
5.0 out of 5 stars Gruesome and yet excellent!! Jan 3 2003
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The eyes, they just had to go. If not, they would haunt you long after the vicims were dead and buried. Cutting them out, that's the ticket. The murder of a well known lady in the town shocks everyone...
When Detective Lucas Davenport gets the case, he's not sure he can do it. After recent butal cases, these nasty murders is not what he needs. The eyes is the worst part... Davenport soon realize that he's up against an evil man with a twisted mind and a facination for death, but yet very intelligent. Trying to catch this person will be hard...
This is one of John Sandford's first books in the Prey Series (#4). And he shows with this book that he's a great writer. His way of adding twists and caputring you right from the start is only a couple of the things that makes him great. The killer of Eyes of Prey can, to a certain extent, even be compared to Hannibal Lector. The gross almost rituals and the horrible acts. Sandfords way of describing the way the characters think, their desires and their way of acting is unique!
Once you're started reading the book you're trapped. No way to get out until you're done with the book. Highly recommended to anyone who loves other Prey-books, and thrillers!!
Was this review helpful to you?
4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Read Feb 10 2004
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Eyes of Prey is a highly suspenseful novel about a doctor who wh plays a cat and mouse game with Minneapolis, P.D., namely Davenport, and takes part in several gruesome murders with a hideous partner in crime. Sandford delivers a good effort with this one but it's not quite as suspenseful as his debut, Rules of Prey. Overall, it's still a better than average suspense novel and very gripping and tense dialogue.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Hold onto your hat
I just started the Prey series a couple of weeks ago and I must say these books are great!! Eyes of prey is so creepy. Read more
Published on Dec 31 2003 by Shawna
5.0 out of 5 stars ghoulish crime story that happens to be *very* good...
Quite honestly I was somewhat disappointed with my first John Sandford novel ('Rules of Prey'), mostly because too much time was spent on the lead character (a police... Read more
Published on Nov 18 2003 by lazza
5.0 out of 5 stars Stumbled upon this prey...
I read numerous books and, up until now, haven't read any of the prey series. I was suspect at first, since I'm in academics, I thought this series might be poorly written--as are... Read more
Published on Jun 25 2003 by Charles J Horne
1.0 out of 5 stars cheap writing
just how many times can a writer fit in the f-word onto one page? i started to read this book and had to put it away, being disgusted at the [bad] language.
Published on May 23 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Prey Book I've Read
I've read Eyes of Prey, Easy Prey, Sudden Prey, Mind Prey, and Certain Prey--and I enjoyed Eyes of Prey the most. Read more
Published on Feb 21 2003
4.0 out of 5 stars Attention Keeper
John Sandford is incredible. This book along with the other prey books definately keeps your attention. Every book in the series is finished the day I buy it. Read more
Published on Oct 11 2002 by Robyn
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Addition to the Prey Series
Like the first two novels in the series, Eyes of Prey is a fun, fast and entertaining read. Eyes of Prey is slightly better than its predecessor, Shadow Prey and shows detective... Read more
Published on July 5 2002 by Chris MB
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book to own!
I read a library copy of this book and am buying it now because I loved the plot and Lucas Davenport as a character. Read more
Published on Jun 15 2002 by Rahmani Vanterpool
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the "Prey" series by far (2/28/02)
I have no idea how I missed this Sandford fiction in his "Prey" series, but I did. It's definitely one of the first with Lucas Davenport. Read more
Published on Mar 1 2002
3.0 out of 5 stars Below average book from the "Prey" series
This was a disappointing story in the "Prey" series by the usually excellent thriller writer, John Sandford and I was pleased to finish it and start another book. Read more
Published on Nov 6 2001 by binnsie
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