Pursuit

Thirteen bodies are found in a Louisville restaurant. When the police can find no suspect or motive, the family of one of the victims seeks the services of the enigmatic and solitary Roy Prescott, known for his ability to find people who don't want to be found.

Working outside the law and willing to do what the police can't, Prescott hunts the killer, an elusive adversary who is as smart, as methodical, as deadly as he is. The only way to conduct this pursuit is to goad the killer into believing that he must kill Roy Prescott. It is a contest fought from one end of the country to the other, and both men understand that, when it's over, only one of them will be alive.

"1100059232"
Pursuit

Thirteen bodies are found in a Louisville restaurant. When the police can find no suspect or motive, the family of one of the victims seeks the services of the enigmatic and solitary Roy Prescott, known for his ability to find people who don't want to be found.

Working outside the law and willing to do what the police can't, Prescott hunts the killer, an elusive adversary who is as smart, as methodical, as deadly as he is. The only way to conduct this pursuit is to goad the killer into believing that he must kill Roy Prescott. It is a contest fought from one end of the country to the other, and both men understand that, when it's over, only one of them will be alive.

20.42 In Stock
Pursuit

Pursuit

by Thomas Perry

Narrated by Tom Weiner

Unabridged — 12 hours, 37 minutes

Pursuit

Pursuit

by Thomas Perry

Narrated by Tom Weiner

Unabridged — 12 hours, 37 minutes

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Overview

Thirteen bodies are found in a Louisville restaurant. When the police can find no suspect or motive, the family of one of the victims seeks the services of the enigmatic and solitary Roy Prescott, known for his ability to find people who don't want to be found.

Working outside the law and willing to do what the police can't, Prescott hunts the killer, an elusive adversary who is as smart, as methodical, as deadly as he is. The only way to conduct this pursuit is to goad the killer into believing that he must kill Roy Prescott. It is a contest fought from one end of the country to the other, and both men understand that, when it's over, only one of them will be alive.


Editorial Reviews

Janet Maslin

Thomas Perry's latest cerebral thriller Pursuit is a bona fide nail-biter, constructed around a simple, two-man cat-and-mouse game.
New York Times

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The massacre of 13 people in a Louisville restaurant opens Perry's latest psychological thriller (after Death Benefits). Criminologist Daniel Millikan determines that this was no random occurrence, but an assassination carried out by a ruthless, methodical predator but who was the target? The killer, James Varney, is a cold-blooded psychopath who claimed his first victim his aunt at the age of 11; a loner, he later turned to robbery and murder for hire. Against his better judgment, Millikan supplies the father of one of the victims with the name of someone who might be able to help: shady operator Roy Prescott. Prescott's past is dark enough to enable him to get inside the mind of the killer and, with Millikan's help, he sets in motion an elaborate cat-and-mouse game that moves from city to city, with each man trying to anticipate the other's every move as the body count continues to rise. The traps Prescott devises to catch his prey and the ways in which Varney eludes them are fascinating, albeit a bit far-fetched, and Perry supplies just enough background to give the two leads depth with a minimum of psychobabble. The female characters, while essential to the plot, are thinly drawn by comparison, and the book loses momentum about halfway through, when Varney goes into hiding and Prescott tries to determine who hired him to commit the initial murders but Perry definitely comes through in the end, expertly tying the threads together. Agent, Lescher and Lescher. 6-city author tour. (Dec. 18) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

From Edgar Award winner Perry: retired police officer Daniel Millikan finds himself-investigating the horrendous murder of 13 people at a Kentucky restaurant. What's more, he's brought in a hit man he once put in jail to help track the killer. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

The creator of the Butcher Boy and disappearing specialist Jane Whitefield presents a bounty-hunter story that tops the genre as an unlicensed killer goes up against his even more dangerous prey. It begins with the horrific, apparently random murders of 13 patrons and staff members in a Louisville restaurant. When Robert Cushner, the father of one of the late diners convinced that his son was the primary target, asks ex-cop LA criminology prof Daniel Millikan, called in as a consultant by the local law, to help him nail the perp, Millikan declines but supplies him with an even more potent name: Roy Prescott, the shadowy figure who's made a specialty of tracking down killers by methods the police don't want to know about. But you do, knows Perry (Blood Money, 2000, etc.), and that's why he can spend the rest of this long, fleet novel alternating between Prescott's plans to eliminate the murderer, sociopathic hired gun James Varney, and Varney's equally enterprising plans, once he hears the footsteps over his shoulder, for decisive countermeasures. The mano a mano set-pieces, from some early skirmishes over the telephone to Prescott's attempt to lure Varney into an elaborately constructed killing field, are nerve-shredding; only the pat flashbacks showing how each of the two antagonists-turned-killer break the tension. Once their backstories are used up, Perry gets down to the serious business of showing Prescott tracking Varney through a series of anonymous midwestern cities as Varney attempts to cover his tracks by killing everyone who's gotten close to him in preparation for targeting his nemesis. Eventually, another 13 people will die before victor and reader can share a sigh ofrelief. The focus throughout is relentlessly analytical, as if two unbeatable computers were battling it out over the chessboard for stakes of life and death-for themselves and for everybody else unlucky enough to be within range. Author tour

From the Publisher

Brilliant . . . a bona fide nail-biter.”
–The New York Times

“Perry is the best suspense writer in the business. . . . Pursuit is relentless, filled with twists and turns, that rare page-turner that keeps one reading late into the night to finish.”
–The Boston Globe

“Once Prescott takes the job, the novel shifts into a gear so high that putting the book aside is no longer an option. . . . a bravura performance from one of the few crime writers who never lets you down.”
–Los Angeles Times

“[A] dazzling new thriller . . . Perry has devised a game board of infernal ingenuity.”
–The New York Times Book Review

“A compulsive page-turner . . . Pursuit is expertly crafted and features a climax guaranteed to set hearts racing.”
–The Denver Post

“A thriller that actually thrills.”
–The Plain Dealer

AUG/SEP 07 - AudioFile

PURSUIT begins with an arresting concept: a ruthless lone wolf is brought in to track and capture an even more ruthless killer. But after a great start, the book peters out as a result of a series of unlikely events. Narrator Tom Weiner is certainly not to blame. He does an impressive job breathing life into the stale plot. But no matter how good the reader, the story is so outrageously flawed that it can't be saved. The end is so quick and anticlimactic it's as if the author got bored with the book and just stopped writing. Pick up DARKLY DREAMING DEXTER by Jeff Lindsay to see how well a similar plot can be handled. M.S. © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169897760
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 01/01/2006
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1

Daniel Millikan looked down at the thirteenth corpse. This one was at the back of the restaurant kitchen, dressed in a white uniform with a ridiculous paper hat on his head that was supposed to keep his hair out of the food, and a long apron that had been filthy even before the blood had gushed down to soak it red. Millikan corrected himself. This was the first corpse, and the one a few feet from it was second. The others, logically, came later.

He bent to let the light catch the tile floor just right so he could tell if there had been any wet footprints in the kitchen, but there had not. There were none in the dining room either: the killer had been here, done his work, and locked the door behind him before the rain had begun. Time in the restaurant had been stopped at—he would guess—around nine-thirty. The light, misty spring rain had not reached Louisville and begun to gleam on the street pavements until late at night, after Daniel Millikan had finished his speech at the conference and retired to his hotel downtown. He had still been awake and noticed it when the rivulets began to run down the window of his room. He had been frustrated because he needed to catch the plane back to California at seven tomorrow morning, but he had been too agitated and restless to sleep.

He never felt tense while lecturing his own students at the college in Los Angeles, but the audience tonight had been people he thought of as grown-ups. They were serious men and women of his own generation who had heard of him and—at least some of them—read his books. They had come to take a look at the expert . . . or, more accurately, at the alleged expert.They had listened to his lecture on the interpretation of homicide evidence with a polite attentiveness that he could only call professional. In the faces of the grown-ups there was always a reserve, something they held back or maybe even disguised, possibly because they had worked homicides and, unlike Millikan, expected to do it again.

He had considered pouring one of the little bottles of scotch from the bar cabinet into a glass, diluting it with tap water, and swallowing enough to help him sleep. He was glad that the two cops had arrived in the lobby and rung his room before he had done it, instead of after. Lieutenant Cowan's voice on the telephone had been courteous but confident: after delivering that particular lecture, Millikan could hardly say he would not dress and go with the police to look at a homicide scene. Right now, he was glad that his brain was functioning quickly and efficiently, but he knew that when he got back to the hotel, he was going to want that drink.

Millikan studied the angle of the body, judged the steps from the back door: ten to twelve. It was easy to see where the boning knife had come from. The row of black-handled kitchen knives in the gleaming stainless steel rack had only one gap. The killer had slipped in the back door and silently cut the dishwasher's throat with the knife he had found. That was a disquieting sign. This killer had been right about too many things: that there would be a weapon where he could reach it; that it would be at least as good and as sharp as anything he could buy and carry; that it would not be of any use to the police, because tracing it led only to the rack on the wall; that he would be quiet enough to take twelve paces unheard and formidable enough to fall on a healthy, strong man in a brightly lighted room and kill him without so much as knocking over a pan or letting him cry out. Millikan judged the distance from the back door to the body again—a good thirty feet. Maybe this killer was invisible.

Millikan looked in the other direction, toward the swinging door to the dining room. After the dishwasher was dead, the killer had dropped the knife into the soapy water in the sink. Then one of the waiters had come in from the dining room. The killer had not tried to reach into the sink to retrieve the knife or pulled out his gun. He had simply broken the waiter's neck, let his body fall into the blood that was already draining onto the tile floor beside the first man, and gone on.

He had walked the next ten feet to that door, stepped into the dining room, and started shooting. The shooting should have been comforting to Millikan, because that was what lots of lifelong losers had chosen as their final act. In those cases it was half murder and half suicide, because they were trying to induce the police to come and put them out of their misery. If the cops didn't appear right away, they usually shot themselves. But this time, the shooting was full of signs that something else had been going on.

The killer had not simply arrived at the restaurant, burst in, and pulled out a gun. He had come first to the front of the building, put a chain and padlock on the front door, and covered the window with a closed sign before he had gone around to the back. That was disturbing. It had been meant to keep new customers from coming in, of course, but it also ensured that once the shooting started, the only way out would be to step over the shooter. This killer had known too much about the way people would behave: they wouldn't even try. The ones near the front door would grasp the handle and get the bad news. The ones farther from it would go low—try to hide behind tables and chairs and each other—and a few would just be paralyzed, too amazed to do anything but let their jaws drop open. This killer had known what to expect.

The shooter had selected. Probably the first round was the one he put through the forehead of the man at the third table. The position of the body indicated the man hadn't dodged or ducked, just looked up and died. The others had come after. They were sprawled, hit anywhere—backs, faces, whatever was visible—when they ran or crouched. Millikan had one more thing to look for. He walked along the far wall, then stood at the front door, examined the backs of seats and the vinyl upholstery of the booths. He lingered for a moment over the spot where the bodies of the two children lay.

Lieutenant Cowan was at his elbow. Cowan was aware that Millikan had made the full tour now, and that he had seen it all. “What do you think?” he asked. Cowan seemed to be in his early thirties, but he had that red-faced, apoplectic look that two of Millikan's uncles had developed when he was a child. They had looked as though it would take only one more aggravating circumstance to make them explode. Millikan pursed his lips, then looked down again. “I don't envy you. I think you've got the genuine article here.”

“What do you mean—the genuine article? A random shooter? We figured out that much. All we had to do was count.”

Millikan shook his head. “Not a nutcase. A pro.”

Cowan seemed to be struggling to keep his reaction from being impolite. Millikan was doing the department a favor, and he was an important man, a name. “Why would a professional killer come in and do all these people in a restaurant—little kids, like this? Did somebody pay him for the first dozen people he saw?”

“He wants you to think he's a guy who wears camouflage fatigues around the house. He wants you to think that tonight he got a big headache and heard Jesus tell him he wanted new angels. But that isn't who he is. He came for one of these people. Just one. My guess would be this guy over here with his brain blown out of the back of his skull. He shot him first.”

Cowan's face compressed in a wince, his eyes squinting at the floor. “I'm not sure what to do with that.”

“What I'd suggest is that you look as hard as you can for the shooter from now until dawn. You won't find him, but you might learn something you'd like to know about him. Then find out who would have paid to have one of these people killed, and get that person into a very small room. Offer him a deal that he can't pass up.”

“A deal—on thirteen people?” Cowan was shocked.

Millikan shrugged. “It's the way you get a hired killer.” His eyes turned away from Cowan and returned to the front wall of the restaurant. He bent over and walked the length of it.

“What are you looking for now?”

“Holes.” Millikan gestured at the door. “None there, either, except the ones that went through somebody. None anywhere. He comes in the back, silently takes out the dishwasher—”

“He was the cook,” said Cowan. “Or one of them. The others went home when the last meal of the night was delivered.”

“All right, the cook. He does him with a knife he finds. It doesn't affect him at all. He puts the knife in the sink to let the prints soak off. The waiter comes in and surprises him, but not enough to do any good. He gives the waiter's neck a twist and drops him on the way into the dining room. He pulls out the gun he brought. His hand is absolutely steady—no fear, not even any nerves. He pops eleven people, with no misses, and at least one fatal round for everybody.” Millikan paused and looked into Cowan's eyes. “No misses. Ever see multiple handgun fatalities with no misses before? Once the first round goes off, people are running, dodging. Then he steps back out, and he's gone.” Millikan looked around him again, then sighed. “Maybe the deal isn't such a good idea, but it's worth a try. I don't think this is a guy I'd rat out for a shorter sentence. I'd take my chances on an appeal.”

Cowan's jaw was tightening and opening, chewing on nothing. “Because he's a good shot?”

“No,” said Millikan. “I'm a good shot, you're a good shot. It's because he's got no more feeling about any of this than a pike snapping up a few minnows. As soon as he thought of it, these folks were dead.” Millikan began to button his raincoat. “When your forensics people are done, I'd appreciate it if somebody would send me a copy. I'm curious about him. And tell your D.A.'s office I'll be happy to fly back and serve as an expert witness if you get him.”

“What could you say in court?”

“Same as I told you. He's trying to look like somebody who went berserk, but he's not. He's a pro. If you get him once, this is a guy you really don't want to let out again. Not ever.”

“You don't seem to think we'll get him.”

Millikan avoided his eyes. “I hope you do.”

Cowan seemed to soften a bit, hoping for some trick, some secret. “We're doing everything we can right now—going house to house. They called in another shift. They're stopping people on the streets for a mile around to see if they saw or heard anything. I don't want bodies dropping all over the place.”

“That won't happen,” said Millikan. “There's not enough work in a city the size of Louisville to keep him occupied. He's had a lot of practice, so if he lived here, you would have noticed. I think he came to town for this.” He looked at his watch. “Can you spare the man who picked me up to take me back to the hotel? I've got to check out and get to the airport.”

“Sure,” said Cowan. “He's waiting out there.” Cowan hesitated. “I appreciate your coming to take a look. You spent practically the whole night here.”

“Don't worry about it,” said Millikan. “I'm sorry I couldn't tell you anything more optimistic.”

The two men shook hands at the door, and Millikan muttered, “Good luck.” He stepped out onto the sidewalk. The rain had begun again, so he hurried toward the open door of the patrol car.

Millikan's plane for Chicago left at seven a.m., but with the delay in Chicago he didn't reach Los Angeles until seven in the evening. He spent the next two days preparing the final examination he was going to give in a week. He was in his small, cramped office in the basement of an old brick building at the university when the call came.

The voice was a woman's. She asked for Professor Millikan, then said significantly, “We're calling from Louisville.”

“This is Daniel Millikan,” he said.

“Is this a convenient time for you to speak with Mr. Robert Cushner?”

Millikan could tell that Robert Cushner was a name he was supposed to know. The woman's voice had conveyed that there was no question that Millikan would be willing to talk to him, only when. But she had said the only word that was necessary: Louisville.

“Now is fine,” he said.

There was a click and the background noise disappeared. A man's voice said, “Professor Millikan?”

“Yes?”

“I understand you were called in to examine the scene of my son's murder.”

Millikan felt a wave of heat rise up his back and stiffen his spine. “Your son?” He recovered. “I'm very sorry, Mr. Cushner. I happened to be at a conference at the University of Louisville. The police knew I was there, because a few of them had attended some of the seminars. One of them called and asked if I would examine a crime scene. The names of the victims weren't known at the time, so I didn't recognize your name. Please accept my condolences. It's very sad that he was in the wrong—”

“He wasn't,” interrupted Cushner. “He wasn't some unlucky bystander or inconvenient witness or something. He was the target. Now, I understand you took one look at the mess in there and knew that.”

“Oh,” said Millikan. His son was the young man alone at the third table, the man with the hole through his forehead. “It was only a theory.”


From the Hardcover edition.

Copyright 2001 by Thomas Perry

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