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Lucas Davenport : ウィキペディア英語版
Lucas Davenport

Lucas Davenport is the protagonist of the "Prey" series of detective novels written by John Sandford. In the first three novels, he is a maverick detective with the Minneapolis Police Department, a lieutenant acting independently, running a network of street contacts. At the end of ''Eyes of Prey'', he's forced to resign to avoid excessive force charges, partly due to his knowledge of the connection of a senior police officer to that case. He returns in ''Night Prey'' as a Deputy Chief (a political appointment), running his own intelligence unit. Beginning with ''Naked Prey'', Davenport is an investigator for the Minnesota Department of Public Safety's Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, acting occasionally as a special troubleshooter for the governor of Minnesota in politically sensitive cases. He's known for his unorthodox and manipulative behavior as a detective, reminiscent of "Dirty Harry" Callahan. He is not a leader, but a loner who works with a small circle of capable, straight police friends.
==Description==
Davenport is described as a tall, slender, wide-shouldered man with a "permanent tan" that gives his very blue eyes a kind expression, contradicted by the "chilly" smile of a predator, particularly a wolverine. Dark-haired, but streaked with gray, Davenport has a face marked by a fine scar from his hairline to the right corner of his mouth (caused by a fishing hook accident) that gives him "a raffish air" and also "a touch of innocence, like Errol Flynn in ''Captain Blood''" (''Rules of Prey''). In the very first Davenport book, the hero is described as "He was slender and dark-complexioned, with straight black hair going grey at the temples and a long nose over a crooked smile. One of his central upper incisors had been chipped and he never had it capped. He might have been an Indian except for his blue eyes." His tooth was chipped during an ice hockey match in his youth. His amateur career had peaked as first-line defenseman for the Golden Gophers of the University of Minnesota. Davenport has suffered a few bullet and knife wounds, and is permanently tan no more.
The novel ''Mind Prey'' was sold for a TV movie, and the Davenport role was grabbed by one of the producers, Eriq LaSalle, who happens to be a black man. He had no hair at all in the role. The movie character's girlfriend, unlike Davenport's fair-haired surgeon of Finnish extraction in the novels, was a black actress who seemed to play either a prostitute or minor show business talent. They cohabited in a lush inner-city pad most unlike the lakeside house described in several Prey novels. Another of the novels, ''Certain Prey'', was adapted into a movie in 2011 by USA Network starring Mark Harmon as Davenport.
Davenport is street-wise, has a wide network of contacts among all levels of society in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul and on occasions finds solutions to criminal investigations by thinking like a criminal. He is also skilled at using computers and other technological sources of information. In recent years as a senior officer of the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension he has been able to call on the services of several specialized research professionals. Beyond these things, he is lucky, a characteristic mentioned in more than one book.
He is not above skirting the law and accepted procedures to move a case forward. He even uses news media contacts to leak secrets to freak out criminal suspects or motivate laggard senior officialdom. Unforeseen civilian deaths sometimes result from these schemes. Davenport is a police celebrity, having shot and killed many suspects in the line of duty. Quite apart from those deaths caused in spontaneous gunfights, Davenport has been suspected -- appropriately -- of engineering some outcomes so that the death of a miscreant is virtually certain. Unusually for a police officer, he has more than once been a target of assassination attempts by criminals; his numerous contacts in the media consider him a good interview, but editors persistently criticize his violence. Davenport feels no hesitation about killing defenseless criminals who present no threat to him. In the first Davenport novel, Rules of Prey, he makes a mechanical device to create the illusion that he is in a gunfight when he kills the criminal in that matter. He does not want the man to die painlessly. That was his sixth police killing. The total today is ten. While Davenport is thought of as lucky, it's a remarkable thing that any criminal who wishes his harm can find his home and attack it, even though he does not have a public phone listing.
Davenport is independently wealthy, having achieved success first through the creation of Dungeons & Dragons-style role playing games. He started and later sold his own software company that first created personal computer games for private users, and later, emergency simulations for training police and other emergency workers. He dresses fashionably, favors European-cut clothing, and drives his personal Porsche 911 and Nissan truck or van while on duty. The Nissan seems to have been replaced recently by a Lexus SUV. Early on, he was depicted as a womanizer, fathering a daughter, Sarah, out of wedlock from a running affair with blonde television news reporter Jennifer Carey. Sarah lives with her mother and a stepfather, and Davenport visits her frequently. As the series progressed, Davenport settled down with and eventually married the highly paid maxillofacial surgeon Weather Karkinnen, who in ''Winter Prey'' once saved his life with an emergency tracheotomy after he had been shot. The couple have a son, Samuel Kalle Davenport, called Sam in the novels, and in ''Buried Prey'', Dr. Karkinnen was advanced in pregnancy with a daughter. Living with the Davenports is Letty West, a once-feral teenage girl encountered in ''Naked Prey''. Lucas and Weather formally adopted Letty in 2008 close to the time of the Republican nomination convention in that year, an event that prompted a detailed Davenport investigation, and she then changed her name to Letty Davenport.
Before that, however, Davenport had numerous sexual encounters with suspects, victims and fellow officers, including Det. Sgt. Marcy Sherrill, a subordinate, and Lily Rothenburg, a detective lieutenant of the New York Police Department. By ''Buried Prey'', Sherrill had succeeded Davenport as chief of detectives in Minneapolis, and Davenport was close to his 50th birthday. At the end of ''Wicked Prey'' (2009), he and Weather adopt Letty, now 14 and an aspiring television reporter mentored by Jennifer Carey -- Davenport's old lover, and mother of Sarah.
Davenport has a reputation as a "gun freak" (''Rules of Prey'') and at the start of the series owns thirteen - a 9mm H&K P7, a 9mm Beretta 92F, a small .25 automatic of unstated make that he wears in an ankle holster as a hideout gun, two Colt Gold Cup .45 ACP competition pistols, three .22 pistols (a Ruger Mark II, a Browning International Medalist and a left-hand bolt-operated Anschutz Exemplar) and four recovered (hence untraceable) street guns including a Charter Arms .38. In the flashback section of Buried Prey Davenport carried a Glock pistol (presumably the Glock 17) as his sidearm when in uniform and a Smith & Wesson Model 40 revolver in plain-clothes. In ''Rules of Prey'', Davenport uses one of his street guns, a Smith & Wesson Model 39, to fabricate a self-defense justification for executing serial killer Louis Vullion.
Lucas' other weapons include a Browning Citori over-and-under 20 gauge shotgun, a .243 deer rifle of unstated make and model (''Chosen Prey'') and a Colt Magnum Carry .357 revolver (''Naked Prey''). In the earlier two books, ''Rules of Prey'' & ''Shadow Prey'' his standard sidearm is the P7, but in ''Eyes of Prey'' he later adopts a .45 Smith & Wesson of unstated model; he retains the P7 as a "dress gun" for off duty carry. In ''Silent Prey'', he uses the Colt Gold Cup as his sidearm while in New York. As of ''Certain Prey'' onwards his usual sidearm is a customized .45 Colt Gold Cup, carried with the chamber empty; something that gives him problems when his left arm is in a cast. In ''Invisible Prey'', he has a cache containing: two "cold" pistols with magazines, a homemade silencer that fits none of his guns (he kept meaning to throw it away, but never did), an old-fashioned lead-and-leather sap, a hydraulic door-spreader that he'd picked up from a burglary site, $5,000 in $20 bills in a paper bank envelope, a pill bottle of amphetamines, a box of surgical gloves and a battery-powered lock rake. In ''Buried Prey'' the cache contains at least the rake along with a ring of "bump" keys, a small crowbar, a pair of white cotton garden gloves and a LED headlamp. By ''Storm Prey'' he has acquired, and uses, a detachable magazine Beretta shotgun of unstated model, probably an M3P. In ''Stolen Prey'' Lucas uses a 9mm Beretta 92F as his main sidearm, presumably because he had a cast on his left arm and it would present an issue if he needed to insert a shell into the chamber of his customized .45 Colt Gold Cup. He switches back to his customized .45 Colt Gold Cup in the next book, ''Silken Prey''.
Letty herself has two (known) weapons, both .22 rifles. One is a single-shot Harrington & Richardson in .22 Short and the other, bought for her by Lucas after the H&R was confiscated by the police after Letty's biological mother was killed by a crooked cop, who got shot by Letty before escaping, a Remington pump-action firing .22 Long Rifle. In ''Buried Prey'' she and Lucas practice shooting together with the Colt and Beretta pistols. In ''Stolen Prey'' Letty uses Lucas' customized .45 Colt Gold Cup to kill two would be assassins.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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