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Authors: Richard Laymon

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Cardiac Arrest

BOOK: Cardiac Arrest
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FASTBACK Mystery

RICHARD LAYMON

Fearon
BELMONT, CALIFORNIA

FASTBACK® MYSTERY BOOKS

Bill Waite's Will
Cardiac Arrest
Dawson's City The Diary
The Face That Stopped Time
A Came for Fools
The Good Luck Smiling Cat
The Intruder
Janie
Mad Enough to Kill
No Witnesses
Shootout at Joe's

Cover photographer: Jim Ross
Copyright © 1984 by David S. Lake Publishers, 19 Davis Drive, Belmont, California 94002. All rights reserved. Mo part of this book may be reproduced by any means, transmitted, or translated into a machine language without written permission from the publisher.
ISBN-0-8224-3463-6
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 83-62091
Printed in the United States of America.
1.  9  8  7  6  5  4  3

J
oyce Walther woke up on Monday morning to the smell of coffee. She hated the taste of the stuff, but she loved its smell. The sizzle and snap of frying bacon came to her ears while she got dressed. The bacon smelled even better than the coffee. She couldn't wait to get into the kitchen.

She
almost
couldn't wait.

As she pulled a brush through her tangled hair, she saw the magazine lying on her dresser
---Whispering Shadows Mystery Monthly.
Joyce set her brush aside and 
picked up the magazine. She turned to page 99. There, in large letters, was her name---
JOYCE WALTHER
.

"Breakfast is ready when you are," her father called from the kitchen.

"Be right there," Joyce answered without looking up.

In spite of the wonderful smells of coffee and bacon, breakfast could wait.

Her eyes stayed on page 99 and on the big words there---
THE OPAL RING
by
JOYCE WALTHER
.

Me.

Above the title was a paragraph Joyce had read so many times during the past two days that she almost knew it by heart. Downstairs, breakfast was getting cold. But Joyce took time to read the paragraph once again.

Our 582nd First Story comes from a very talented 18-year-old who is studying English at Santa Monica College. Joyce Walther, the daughter of jewelry store owner Bryce Walther and actress Monica Walther (now seen on the soap opera "City Hospital"), has blended her knowledge of jewels and TV to write a clever story that will keep readers guessing until the last word. We are pleased to find such talent in one so young and can only hope to see more of her work in the near future.

Joyce grinned at herself in the mirror.

Her throat tickled as if a giggle were

trapped inside and about to spring free. "Joyce!" her father called one last time.

"Your breakfast is on the table."

"I'm coming!"

Joyce set down the magazine and took one last look at its shiny red cover. "Very talented," she whispered. Then she hurried to the kitchen.

Water was boiling on the stove. Joyce gave her parents a happy greeting as she turned off the flame. She reached behind the heavy iron pan and lifted the teapot off the back burner. A mug with a tea bag in it was waiting on the counter. She added the boiling water, then a touch of milk and a spoonful of sugar. With the tea just the way she liked it, she carried her mug to the table and sat down.

"So," her father said, "how's our famous mystery writer this fine morning?"

"Great. I thought up a new story last night. I want to get started on it right away."

"Then I guess you won't have time to go with me to the shopping mall," her mother said.

Frowning at her plate, Joyce started to pick at her bacon and eggs. "I don't know," she mumbled. She was very anxious to start writing. On the other hand, the shopping mall did have two bookstores. She never liked to miss a chance to look around in them. "Are you going, Dad?" she asked.

He shook his head. "I have to clean the pool."

Joyce took a bite and stared out the sliding screen door. A few leaves were floating on the calm surface of the swimming pool. "It doesn't look so bad. Why don't you come along, and I'll help you with the pool when we get back?"

"Well..." Mr. Walther seemed to be thinking it over.

"Oh, come on," Mrs. Walther said. "It's your day off."

Her husband smiled. "You talked me into it. Maybe we can have some lunch at that Greek---"

The sound of the screen door being slammed open stopped his words.

Joyce gasped. Her fork dropped with a loud clatter onto her plate.

Mr. Walther jumped to his feet so fast that he knocked his chair over.

Mrs. Walther slapped a hand to her mouth as if to hold in a scream.

Through the open screen door charged two men with guns. The man in the lead aimed his revolver at Joyce's father. "Nobody move!" he shouted.

"W
hat's going on?" Mr. Walther asked in a low voice. He sounded more angry than scared.

"Nothing to get excited about," said the first man. "Keep calm, and nobody will get hurt."

"We don't want nobody getting hurt," the other man added.

"
Any
body," Joyce said, and shut her mouth tight as the smaller man pointed his gun at her. She wondered if she should say that she was sorry for correcting his English. She decided to keep quiet.

"The kid's a wise guy, Murph."

"I'm sure she didn't mean anything by---" Joyce's mother started.

"Shut up," said the man called Murph. The hard words had cut Mrs. Walther 
off. Her face turned a bright red color. "Now look here---" Mr. Walther began. "No,
you
look," Murph said. "Look right into the barrel of
this.''
He raised the revolver toward Mr. Walther's face. "We can do this the easy way or the hard way." "What do you want?" Joyce's father said in a low voice.

"You're Bryce Walther, right? Owner of Walther's Jewelry over on Fifth Street?" Mr. Walther nodded.

"Your shop is closed today. It's closed every Sunday and Monday."

"You've done your homework," Mr. Walther said.

A mean smile curved Murph's lips.

Joyce noticed a C-shaped scar on his left cheek. She made a note of this in her mind. She realized that she should try to 
remember everything she could about how both men looked. Anything she could tell the police might come in handy later. Besides, she might want to write about a guy like this in one of her stories.

The name is Murph. A white male, about 25 years old, six feet tall, blue eyes, neatly trimmed brown hair. Wearing a blue sports jacket, blue tie, white shirt, gray slacks, and shiny black shoes.

"Well, Bryce," Murph said, "I've got a little surprise for you. You're open for business this morning, and I'm going to be your only customer."

That's why he's all dressed up,
Joyce thought.
So he won't look odd entering the jewelry store with Dad.

"You're going to rob it!" she blurted out.

"That's the picture," Murph said, not 
turning away from her father. "And just to make sure that you don't try to be a hero, Bryce, my friend here will be keeping the wife and kid company until you and I come back with the goodies. As long as everything goes nice and smooth, he won't harm them." Murph smiled at his friend. "You'll be nice and friendly, won't you?" The smaller man nodded. "We don't want nobody getting hurt."

Anybody,
Joyce thought. But she kept her mouth shut.

"Any questions?" Murph asked.

"Yes," Mr. Walther said. "What happens if...I mean, I'll do nothing to put my family in danger, but...there are other shop owners on the block who know I'm closed today. If one of them sees me going in..."

"Then you'd better have a good story. If we're not back with the goodies in half an hour---bang bang."

Mr. Walther's face turned pale.

"Okay, Bud, tie them up."

"A
re you OK, Mom?" Joyce had a worried look on her face.

Joyce's mother nodded.

"You don't look too good."

"Knock off the small talk," Bud said. He was leaning against the refrigerator, watching them with his tiny eyes. Joyce and her mother were tied to kitchen chairs.

Joyce noticed that this second man,

Bud, wasn't well dressed like Murph. He 
wore jeans and a T-shirt. Bud looked a little nervous. That wasn't like Murph either. Even from her seat at the kitchen table, Joyce could see the sweat on the man's face. He kept moving his gun from one hand to the other and wiping his hands on his jeans.

"Is that a thirty-two caliber automatic?" Joyce asked.

"Don't talk to him, dear," her mother said.

"I just want to know." Joyce tried to smile at Bud. "I'm a writer," she told him. "I write mystery stories."

"Good for you," he muttered. "I live them."

Joyce went on. "Maybe I can use all this in a story, you know? I've never seen a real thirty-two automatic."

"Shut up, kid," Bud snapped at her.

He took a quick look at the clock on the wall. Joyce looked, too. Five minutes had gone by since her father had left the house with Murph.

"How many people have you shot with that gun?" Joyce asked.

"Joyce, please." Her mother sounded nervous.

"Nosey kid," Bud said. He rubbed the sweat off his upper lip.

"Come on," Joyce said. "You can tell me. I'm just a curious kid. How many people have you shot?"

"You keep being so curious, sister, and you're going to be the first."

"You shoot us," Joyce said, "and you'll be facing a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. Or maybe attempted murder.

Or maybe even murder. I don't know how good a shot you are."

"You don't want to find out," Bud said. "How do you feel about capital punishment?"

"Are you crazy?" Bud waved the gun at Joyce. "Cut the cute talk, kid. You're not going to rattle me."

"I'm not trying to rattle you," Joyce said. "It's just that someone in your line of work should think about things like the gas chamber."

This time Bud aimed the gun right at Joyce. "I knew I should have gagged you in the first place," he said. "What do I want to be talking to a kid for?"

The man looked a little sick. He licked his lips and shook his head. "Kid, you are pushing too far and too hard."

"Joyce," Mrs. Walther said. "Please don't..."

"Are you sure you're feeling OK?" Joyce asked her. "You look kind of pale."

"I'm all right."

"Do you need one of your pills? Maybe Bud will get them for you." She looked at the man. He was frowning. "Mom has a little brown bottle of nitroglycerin pills in the bathroom. In the medicine cabinet. Maybe you'd better go get them."

"Nitro?"

"For her heart condition. With all this stress...I'm a little worried."

BOOK: Cardiac Arrest
13.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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