In recent months I have
noticed that those authors who are really making e-books work are authors that have
a backlist of multiple titles that can be released in electronic format. I
think Bill Crider must have noticed the same thing as there has been a steady
drumbeat of his older titles coming back out in e-book. In recent days he released
several and Murder Most Fowl is one.
You simply can’t go wrong with a Bill Crider book.
Murder Most Fowl
by
Bill Crider
Chapter One
Elijah Ward
had chained himself to the exit door at Wal-Mart again. It was the second time in the last couple of
months.
Ward was
about sixty years old. He was six feet,
four inches tall, and despite his first name, he didn't look much like an Old
Testament prophet except for the gleam of fanaticism in his dark eyes. He had a red, leathery face and black hair
with just a touch of gray in it.
Besides
about twenty feet of towing chain, he was wearing a pair of faded blue denim
pants and a short-sleeved blue shirt that showed the bulging muscles in his
upper arms. His unruly hair was only
partially covered by a Houston Astros cap.
"You
can get in, but you can't get out," Ward told the crowd that had gathered
in the glassed-in entranceway.
"That's
right," a woman said. It was Ward's
wife, Rayjean, who was no more than five feet tall and as thin as a pick
handle. She had thin lips and a thin,
foxy face. Her thin brown hair was
pulled back into a tight bun. "You
can get in, but you can't get out!"
She was
holding a sign tacked onto a piece of wood that might have been a fence picket
at one time. The sign had been printed by
hand with a black marker. Whoever had
made it had taken the time to do it right:
WAL-MART
IS
UNFAIR TO
THE SMALLTOWN
MERCHANT!
"They've
ruined your downtown," Ward told the curious crowd. "Look at all the empty buildings you've
got, nothin' in 'em but pigeon nests.
Think of all your neighbors that went broke there, just tryin' to make
an honest livin'."
"You
can get in," his wife said waving her sign toward the doors that opened
into the store, "but you can't get out!"
No one was
trying to get in, however. Everyone was
too interested in seeing what would happen to the Wards.
Even the
store employees were interested. Most of
them had left their positions behind the cash registers and in the departments
where they worked to come see what all the commotion was about. They were all wearing their blue Wal-Mart
vests, and they stood just inside the closed glass doors, looking out at the
crowd and at the Wards.
Elijah Ward
rattled his chains. "You can get
in, but --"
"--you
can't get out!" Rayjean said.
"You
can get in, but --"
"They
can get out through the back door in the automotive department," Sheriff
Dan Rhodes said, as the crowd made way for him.
"Or the manager will just let them out through the 'in' doors, the
way he did the last time you tried this."
"Maybe
so," Ward said, unconcerned about Rhodes' intervention. "But if they come through the front,
they'll have to duck down under that little bar they've got across there to
keep people from sneakin' out that way.
Got 'em a guard there, too, that they call a 'greeter.' Guard is more like it. They don't trust folks like I did, back when
I had a store."
"Things
aren't like the way they were then," Rhodes said.
"They
sure aren't," Ward agreed.
"You might as well leave me alone, Sheriff. I'm not leavin' this time. I'm willin' to go to jail for my
beliefs."
"Me,
too," Rayjean said, pumping her sign up and down. "Take me to the pokey, Sheriff. That's the only way you'll get me out of
here."
She was
probably serious, Rhodes thought. The
last time this had happened, he had been able to talk the Wards into going home
peacefully. It looked as if this time
might turn out to be different.
Bill Crider ©1994, 2014
5 comments:
Neat opening. I'm intrigued and will read it for sure, but then I'm a fan.
Great beginning!
Looks like Sheriff Dan has a situation. Great opening.
Great first few! I've already mentioned I love the title and cover! The inside seems to not disappoint!
Bill Crider is such a hoot! I love his work.
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