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Stolen Prey

Stolen Prey

Titel: Stolen Prey Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: John Sandford
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That’ll amount to a bunch of legal writs, freezing bank accounts somewhere. The street stuff—that’s you guys.”
    T HE BCA guys all glanced at each other, and Shaffer said, “Well, that’s clear enough. We’ll be glad to cooperate on that.”
    Lucas asked a few more questions, the most critical one, for his immediate future, being “Can these guys pass as Americans?”
    O’Brien said, “Probably not. In the border states, their retailers are mostly Hispanic, recruited out of the prison system in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Some of them are native English speakers, grew up in Los Angeles or Phoenix. Some of them hardly speak a word of English, and settle down in the barrios in LA. Up north, here, they use a lot of Anglo prison gangs—just a straight money deal. But their gunmen, their hit men, they almost all come from Mexico. They grow up with the gangs.”
    “So the guys we’re looking for, they’re probably Mexican.”
    O’Brien nodded. “Yeah. If we’ve got this right. If it’s not some kind of … French connection.”
    They talked around for a while, and then Shaffer said he’d put all the accountants together after the DEA agents walked through the murder scene.
    L UCAS WENT back to his office and found a call from Billy Andrews, the St. Paul cop, who said they’d located the guy who knew about bad Mexicans in town. Lucas called Del, who was still in the building, and recruited him to go along for the ride.
    Before he left, he called Virgil Flowers, an agent who worked southern Minnesota, and told him about the horse shit clue to the ATM robbers.
    “Sounds like it’s right up my alley,” Flowers said. “Horseshit.”
    “I’ve been told that we could call around to county agents to see if they might know about riding stables, and who’d have hired hands as cleanup people … or some such. I’d do it myself, but now I’m all tangled up in this Wayzata murder. We’re talking Mexican drug killers.”
    “Lot more eye-catching than horse shit,” Flowers observed.
    “Well, I’m a lot more important than you are,” Lucas said. “So…”
    “I’ll do it, but I’m working on the Partridge Plastics thing, so there’ll be extra hours involved,” Flowers said. “If I get them, I’ll want to work a little undertime in the next couple of weeks.”
    “Just locate them,” Lucas said. “You don’t have to
get
them. I want to be there for the
get
. We can talk about the undertime … if you find them.”
    “Oh, I’ll find them,” Flowers said.
    A NDREWS WAS a detective with St. Paul narcotics/vice. He was so large that he was hard to miss: six seven or six eight, maybe240 pounds, with over-the-ears blond hair and gold-rimmed glasses. He looked like a tight end with a PhD in European literature. He dressed in dark sport coats over black golf shirts because, he thought, they made him look smaller. They didn’t; they made him look like a hole in space. His nose had been broken a couple of times, and maybe his teeth: he had an improbably even white smile.
    They picked him up at the St. Paul police headquarters. He got in the backseat of the Lexus and said, “Okay, this guy’s name is Daniel Castells.”
    “Dope dealer?” Del asked.
    “Don’t think so. He just sort of hangs out,” Andrews said. “It’s not real clear where his money comes from. He buys and sells, we hear … maybe, like stuff that’s fallen off a truck. Maybe. If a pound of coke came along, with no strings attached, he might find a place to put it. Or he might put that guy who had the coke with a guy who wanted it. Or maybe he’d run like hell. I dunno. People say he’s a smart guy.”
    “Where is he?”
    “He’s got a booth at McDonald’s, over at Snelling and University,” Andrews said. “Drinks a lot of coffee. Eats French fries. Talks to people on a cell phone. He’s there now. Dan Walker is keeping an eye on him.”
    “Does he know we’re coming?” Lucas asked.
    “We haven’t mentioned it,” Andrews said.
    “Sounds like the guy to know,” Lucas said. “I’m surprised I haven’t heard of him.”
    “Showed up here a couple of years ago, keeps his head down,” Andrews said. “I’ve thought about watching him, to see what he’sgot going. I’d like to get some prints, or even some DNA, maybe track him down somewhere else.”
    “Not a bad idea,” Lucas said.
    T HEY TOOK ten minutes getting to the McDonald’s, and Andrews called his watchman, Walker, on a handset

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