Masked Prey Read online




  ALSO BY JOHN SANDFORD

  Rules of Prey

  Shadow Prey

  Eyes of Prey

  Silent Prey

  Winter Prey

  Night Prey

  Mind Prey

  Sudden Prey

  Secret Prey

  Certain Prey

  Easy Prey

  Chosen Prey

  Mortal Prey

  Naked Prey

  Hidden Prey

  Broken Prey

  Invisible Prey

  Phantom Prey

  Wicked Prey

  Storm Prey

  Buried Prey

  Stolen Prey

  Silken Prey

  Field of Prey

  Gathering Prey

  Extreme Prey

  Golden Prey

  Twisted Prey

  Neon Prey

  KIDD NOVELS

  The Fool’s Run

  The Empress File

  The Devil’s Code

  The Hanged Man’s Song

  VIRGIL FLOWERS NOVELS

  Dark of the Moon

  Heat Lightning

  Rough Country

  Bad Blood

  Shock Wave

  Mad River

  Storm Front

  Deadline

  Escape Clause

  Deep Freeze

  Holy Ghost

  Bloody Genius

  STAND-ALONE NOVELS

  Saturn Run (with Ctein)

  The Night Crew

  Dead Watch

  BY JOHN SANDFORD and MICHELE COOK

  Uncaged

  Outrage

  Rampage

  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

  Publishers Since 1838

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  penguinrandomhouse.com

  Copyright © 2020 by John Sandford

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Sandford, John, 1944 February 23– author.

  Title: Masked prey / John Sandford.

  Description: New York : G. P. Putnam’s Sons, [2020] | Series: A Lucas Davenport novel

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020008499 (print) | LCCN 2020008500 (ebook) | ISBN 9780525539520 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780525539537 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCSH: Davenport, Lucas (Fictitious character)—Fiction. | Political fiction. | GSAFD: Suspense fiction. | Mystery fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3569.A516 M37 2020 (print) | LCC PS3569.A516 (ebook) | DDC 813/.54—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020008499

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020008500

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  pid_prh_5.5.0_c0_r0

  For our good friend, Cynthia Klahr Johnson

  Contents

  Also by John Sandford

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Chapter Twenty-two

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Chapter Twenty-four

  Chapter Twenty-five

  Chapter Twenty-six

  About the Author

  CHAPTER

  ONE

  Audrey Coil and Blake Winston had been sexting each other for weeks.

  Winston’s penis, of which Coil had seen perhaps seven or eight iPhone views in a variety of penile moods, was not clearly different than the penises of a dozen other classmates that Coil had seen, circulated through the smartphones operated by girls in their final year at The Claridge School—a school with a capital-T in “The,” so it wasn’t some Claridge School, it was The Claridge School, of Reston, Virginia.

  And Coil suspected that images of her breasts wouldn’t exactly be breaking news among selected males of The Claridge School’s senior class. She was correct in that. Neither Coil nor Winston was a virgin, having dispensed with that handicap in the fifth form, known in less snotty schools as eleventh grade. They hadn’t yet fully engaged with each other, but were edging toward it . . . though, not yet.

  All of that was neither here nor there. Right now, Coil’s main preoccupation wasn’t with Winston’s junk, but with his totally erect Nikon Z6 camera.

  * * *

  —

  THERE WERE LED light panels to her left and right, dimmed by photo umbrellas that would kill any harsh shadows. A smaller light sat directly behind her, braced on a toilet seat, providing a rim light that gave a soft glow to her auburn hair. The camera sat on a tripod in the bathroom doorway, with Winston behind it.

  Winston, who was seventeen, would someday inherit a bazillion dollars; his father ran a hedge fund with offices in Birmingham, Alabama, and Manhattan. In addition, Winston was good-looking, with dark eyes and dark hair, a square chin, and a pale, flawless complexion. He was further distinguished by the fact that he was already operating a profitable after-school business in video production.

  At the moment, they were jammed into Coil’s bathroom on the second floor of the Coil house in Arlington, Virginia, across the Potomac from Washington, DC.

  Coil was dressed in a pale blue translucent chemise that revealed a slice of boob but—carefully—no nipple, because of the Puritan constraints of Instagram. Coil carried the fleshy pink face and body of a post-pubescent party chick, a tease and a promise, a girl that former President Bill Clinton would have instantly accepted as an intern. The daughter of U.S. Senator Roberta J. “Bob” Coil of Georgia, she was another budding entrepreneur and ran her own blog, which was spread across a number of social media outlets. The blog was called Young’nHot’nDC.

  She had four paying sponsors: Macon Cosmo, a line of girly cosmetics out of Macon, Georgia; Sandy Silks, an Atlanta lingerie manufacturer marketing to richie-rich teens and college-age women; LA Psyche, a maker of dance-influenced tops and bottoms for young women, based in Paris (Texas); and Anshiser Aerospace, a defense company that simply wanted to encourage young entrepreneurs with no thought about influencing her mother, a ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

  Coil turned away from a lighted makeup mirror, l
ooked into the camera lens, smiled, and said, “Honest to God, I wouldn’t bullshit you girls: this line from Macon blows everything else out of the water. Why? Because the colors are gorgeous and smooth and best of all, they stay put no matter what you do to them.” She stuck out a long pink tongue, nearly touched her nose with it, then drew it back over her full upper lip, gave the lens a toothy smile, and asked, “Get it?”

  * * *

  —

  “DONE,” WINSTON SAID. “We got it.”

  “About time,” Coil said. That had been the fourth take for two minutes of video.

  They went into her bedroom and Coil put on her glasses—she never wore them in public—sat cross-legged on her bed, and reviewed the video on Winston’s MacBook Pro. Coil, eyes narrowed in thought, said finally, “Y-e-a-a-a-ah, I think that’s got it.”

  “If they don’t get the point from that, they won’t get it at all,” Winston said. He was standing behind her, looking down at the screen. “The big question is, you’re showing quite a bit of titty. Is it gonna pass with Senator Mom?”

  “She doesn’t care what I show as long as I don’t do it in blackface,” Coil said. “And how come you say titty? Everybody else says tits or boobs. Titty sounds like an old man.”

  Winston deepened his Southern accent: “That’s what you say when you’re from Alabama.”

  “Oh, yeah,” Coil said. “That whole sweet-home thing.”

  “Mmm. Listen, I need to clean the video up, put a credit on it,” Winston said. “I’ll email the file to you tonight.”

  Coil nodded, then frowned and said, “I’ve been meaning to ask you something. The other day you and Danny were talking about that photo-matching app. I was wondering if my stuff is getting around the ’net. You know, outside my own blog. Could you . . .”

  “Yeah, take about twelve seconds,” Winston said. He sat next to her, took the laptop, grabbed a bunch of frames from the photo shoot that showed Coil’s head from different angles, including four that were almost head-on, but with varying expressions. He went to a website called Da’Guerre, dragged the photos into an open window, and pressed Return.

  He handed the laptop back to Coil as it busied itself with whatever computers do. Winston stood and eased up behind Coil, who leaned the back of her head against his crotch and started slowly rubbing. In one minute, which was about two minutes too soon for Winston, the computer produced a hundred photos of young women who looked an awful lot like Coil, including six that were Coil.

  “Are they all mine?” Winston asked. He leaned over her shoulder and touched the screen with a fingernail. “Wait. Not this one . . . I think that’s the yearbook photo from last year. Didn’t you put that up on the blog?”

  “Yes—when I was bitching about how bad they make you look in yearbooks . . . but what’s this?” Coil asked. She reached out at the screen, pointing at one of the photos. “That’s me with Molly. We’re walking out of school. Where did that come from?”

  “We shot that for the blog post about the see-through yoga pants, remember? You guys were talking about seeing some fat chick’s ass crack in the yoga class. It was only up for a day or two.”

  “Yeah, but . . . what’s this link . . .”

  They followed the link out to a blog called 1919, a primitive piece of work that featured candid photos of what looked like kids walking along different streets, or standing outside what appeared to be schools. A single column of type ran down the left side of the screen, which they ignored for the moment.

  Winston said, “What the hell?”

  “Yeah, what the hell? How’d that get over here?”

  “Who are these other people?” Winston asked.

  Coil tapped a different photo and said, “I know that kid. That little kid, that’s Senator Cherry’s daughter, that’s Mrs. Cherry with her. And this one . . .”

  She tapped another photo. “I don’t know that kid’s name, but his dad is a political big shot. Maybe in the House. I talked to him at the congressional baseball game, he was sitting with the families.”

  “Did you blow him?” A continuing joke; he always asked, she always temporized, as if it were a possibility.

  “Not yet,” she said.

  “Here we go . . . here’s their names . . .” Winston pointed at an awkwardly placed block of type.

  * * *

  —

  THEN THEY HEARD, from down below, a garage door rolling up. Coil looked up from the screen and said, “Shit! That’s Mom. Open the door a crack.”

  She pulled off the chemise and Winston took a few seconds to appreciate her breasts as he was opening the bedroom door. They disappeared as she pulled a black T-shirt over her head, tucked it into her jeans, and said, “Go on over and start taking down the lights. Don’t take them all down until she comes in. Let her see you doing it, packing up. Try to do something about your hard-on.”

  She checked herself for propriety. Then, when they heard a door open at the other end of the house, she shouted, “Mom! Blake and I are in my bedroom.”

  Senator Coil, a tall, thin, over-caffeinated woman in a blue suit, stuck her head in the bedroom door a moment later. She looked at Winston and then at her daughter, suspicion in her eyes and tone: “What’s going on here?”

  “Doing a lipstick ad for the blog. We needed to shoot into my makeup mirror. But! We found something really weird . . .”

  The elder Coil may have had more questions about the photo shoot, and more specifically about the rapidly wilting remnants of Winston’s erection, if she’d noticed that, but she shut up when Audrey Coil began pointing out the photos on the 1919 blog.

  “What the heck . . . and look at this,” Audrey Coil said.

  The senator tapped the computer screen, the column of type. “These people . . . these people are . . . oh, no.”

  * * *

  —

  AS THE SENATOR from Georgia and her daughter were looking at the photographs, Randy Stokes rolled his broken-ass 2002 Pontiac Firebird into the graveled parking lot of Chuck’s Wagon, a crappy country music grill outside of Warrenton, Virginia, an hour’s drive west of Arlington.

  Stokes had had his problems—beer, wine, bourbon, weed, crack, methamphetamine, oxycodone, and a short but violent teenage romance with paint thinner—none of which he would have had if the country hadn’t been overwhelmed with greedy, grasping blacks, Hispanics, Arabs, and a whole range of Asians who kept him from his rightful due as a white man. Except for them, he believed, he might have become a lawyer, or a golf pro.

  Lately he’d been clean, back working construction; clean except for the beer and Old Crow Bourbon, $7.99 a bottle. Even the Old Crow had adopted the foreign, and therefore un-American, 750-milliliter bottle, which was probably invented by the French or some other faggots over there, instead of the traditional American fifth, which actually contained three-tenths of an ounce more whiskey than the 750-milliliter bottle, but at the same price, SO WE’RE BEING SCREWED by this foreign intrusion.

  In his opinion.

  He’d been told his opinions were stupid, often by people who were bigger, stronger, meaner, and smarter than he was, but this was still America, and he had a right to his opinions, didn’t he?

  * * *

  —

  STOKES WAS A SHORT THIN MAN, with short thinning brown hair that he cut himself with a home-barbering set that he’d found at a garage sale for six dollars. It did a good enough job, he thought, but he only had one attachment head for the electric clipper, so his hair was exactly the same length all over his head, all the time. That gave him the aspect of a hedgehog when he took off his coiled-snake “Don’t Tread On Me” ball cap, which he rarely did.

  Other than that, he looked pretty normal, with brown eyes, a short button nose, and a small rosebud mouth that guarded the gray teeth left behind from his adventure with methamphetamine.

  Before g
etting out of his car, Stokes collected the pile of Diet Pepsi bottles and Hostess Fruit Pie boxes from the floor of the passenger side, crushed them against his chest so he’d only have to make one trip, and deposited them in the trash can outside the Chuck’s Wagon main door. Inside, in the dim light, he spotted Elias Dunn, sitting alone at the bar with a bottle of Budweiser, looking up at the Fox News program on the overhead TV.

  “Hey, El,” he said, as he slid onto a stool two down from the other man. He didn’t sit right next to him because that’d seem a little queer.

  Dunn looked over at him—was that a flash of disdain?—and said, “Stokes.”

  Stokes looked around. There were ten other people in the place, he and Dunn at the short bar, a dozen tables and booths, served by one slow-moving waitress. Chuck’s Wagon smelled of microwave everything: barbeque, pasta, pizza, pot pies, anything that could be stored frozen and nuked.

  Stokes and Dunn had met on a construction job. Dunn was a civil engineer, and had been leading a survey crew staking out the streets and drainage for a new subdivision over toward Gainesville. Stokes had been a shovel operator—the kind of shovel that had a wooden handle—and had peppered Dunn with questions about his thirteen-thousand-dollar surveyor’s total station.

  Stokes, it seemed, was an enthusiastic rifleman and was fascinated by the total station, which was an optically-linked computer on a tripod. With a scope and a laser range finder, the instruments had replaced the old surveyor transits. They could tell you that you were, say, four hundred and twenty-four yards, two feet, nine and three-eighths inches from your target and could tell you exactly how much higher or lower you were than your target.

  After talking for a few minutes out on the job site, Dunn had concluded that even if Stokes could pull a trigger, the operation of a total station was beyond his intellectual reach.

  * * *

  —

  NOW STOKES WAVED at the bartender and said, “PBR,” and the bartender said, “No offense, Randy, but you got the cash?”