Read Everything She Ever Wanted Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #Case studies, #True Crime, #Criminology, #Serial Killers, #Georgia, #Murder Georgia Pike County Case Studies, #Pike County
husband that there were rats running all over the place, that Pat and
the babies were in "terrible condition.
They were the most pitiful
sight when I got there."
Susan remembered how happy they all were to
see her grandmother arrive, a one-woman army to the rescue.
"We adored
her.
When Boppo showed up, we knew that things were going to be under
control again."
When they arrived back in Gary, Kent gave up his bedroom to his sister
and moved into the living room.
It would be a horoughly entrenched
pattern.
Rescuing Pat from danger was gradually becoming the entire
thrust of Margureitte Radcliffe's life.
With her mother's enthusiastic
support, Pat would spend the next several years traveling back and
forth between her parents'home and Gil's duty stations.
Gil was sent to Iceland, Germany, and Washington, D.C and he usually
went by himself.
There was a plethora of emergencies, each one only
serving to convince Margureitte that Pat and the children should stay
with her.
Pat was driving one day when Deborah accidentally hit the
door handle and fell out into the street.
Luckily, there were no cars
behind them.
Susan's baby book bears a cryptic notation.
"Age 3. Susan run over by
a truck.
Not injured."
Susan does not remember being hit by a
truck.
How odd that all of her baby presents, all of her measurements, her
first words, were listed in her baby book, but something as potentially
tragic as being "run over by a truck" has no details at all.
. . .
When Susan was four and Deborah two, Gil was assigned to the
Philippines and he persuaded Pat to bring their little girls and join
him there.
Things would be better; he would make her happy.
He adored his beautiful young wife and was thrilled that she would
leave her mother behind and come to him.
While they were in the Philippines, Deborah caught a fungus infection
from her cat and all her hair fell out.
She was partially bald for the
next three years, but Pat designed clever hats to cover her hair
loss.
Every dress had its matching hat.
She was a superb seamstress and made most of the two little
girls'clothes.
Susan and Deborah always wore either matching or
contrasting outfits for special occasions-dressed not unlike the way
their mother had dressed as a child.
Pat took scores of pictures of
her daughters and of the events that marked the passing years of their
lives.
Susan and Deborah in Easter coats and bonnets, Valentine's Day
dresses, Christmas dresses-two browneyed little girls looking like
dolls.
To glance through the Radcliffe and Taylor family albums was to
see Christmas dinners, Halloweens, Easters, and birthdays right out of
Good Housekeeping.
Everyone was smiling.
Everyone was dressed
precisely right.
Boppo and Pat, of course, wore frilly aprons as they
carved a turkey or carried in a birthday cake.
"It was strange," Susan
recalled.
"At that time, Mom didn't care how she dressed-but she
always wanted us to look perfect."
Pat went through a period when her clothes were almost matronly.
Gone
were the soft dreamy dresses of herearly teens.
In her twenties, she
wore high-necked blouses and long skirts in muted colors.
She parted
her hair on the side and pulled it back in severe tight curls.
Heavy
harlequin glasses hid her green eyes, and her shoes were Cuban heeled
and sensible.
And all the while her figure was as slim and attractive
as always.
But it was hidden beneath those clothes, her sensuality
blunted.
Despite Deborah's miserable fungus, they all enjoyed the Philippines
for a while.
But then it began to unravel.
Pat wrote her mother that
she had suffered two miscarriages and she needed Boppo to come help
her.
"I was four or five months pregnant, and I was all alone.
I
didn't know what to do, so I just sat on the toilet and flushed them
away."
But this time her mother couldn't come; she was in Europe with her
husband at his duty station and she had to choose.
For once, she chose
Cliff.
Susan had a vague memory of being injured while they were in the
Philippines.
"Somehow, my hand was crushed.
I don't know if it got
shut in a car door or what happened.
I only know it was Christmas time
and I was in the hospital and I heard them singing carols in the
hall.
My mother came to see me, but I wouldn't look at her.
Children
remember things oddly.
I heard the carols and I turned my face to the
wall until my mother went away.
Pat wrote again to her mother, saying her doctor had told her that Gil
was an animal and was wearing her out with his insatiable demands for
sex.
Margureitte was horrified, and when Pat became pregnant again, her
mother insisted that she return to the States.
Once more Pat and the
girls went back to "family."
Boppo and Papa were still in Germany, but
Pat and the girls lived in North Carolina with Mama Siler, who was
delighted to have her precious Patty back.
This time Pat gave birth to a boy.
Ronnie Taylor was born in November
of 1958.
Pat was twenty-one, immature, indulged, and seemingly
incapable of taking care of her husband and her children without the
support of her family.
She also tended to embroider on the truth a little and was given to
hysteria and histrionics.
But her family considered her only a little
highstrung.
And, in upper-class southern women, being high-strung was
almost an admirable trait, bespeaking fine genes.
The Silers had
produced a number of "high-strung" females.
When their antics became
tiresome, the rest of the family intoned, "She needs professional
help."
Otherwise, they scarcely noticed a tizzy or two.
In 19S9, Pat and the children again tried living with Gil-in the
Magnolia Gardens Apartments in Falls Church, Virginia.
"I think we
were too much for her-without my grandmother to help," Susan
recalled.
There was a new, frenetic quality about Pat.
She fought constantly
with a woman who lived in an upstairs apartment.
Margureitte, by now
back in the States, was appalled when she visited and heard Pat
screaming insults.
"You're actin like a fishwife, Pat," she gently
remonstrated.
Pat kept the door locked all the time, frightening her children with
warnings that someone was trying to get in.
Susan yearned to breathe
fresh air and escaped outside whenever she could.
She wandered all
over the neighborhood-alone-but felt safer than when she was locked in
with her mother's fears.
There was no one trying to break into the apartment; Pat simply wanted
Gil to come home and help her, and her stories usually got her what she
wanted.
She was often hysterical, but that too served a purpose.
When she was
small, she had only to stamp her foot and pitch a fit to get her way.
Now, she was using the same methods.
And what Pat really wanted was to
go home, to live with Boppo and Papa and have all the onerous burdens
of parenthood lifted from her shoulders.
She also wanted to be rich.
Pat still dressed her children with exquisite good taste.
She fixated on the way Jackie Kennedy dressed John-John, and she wanted
Ronnie to look just like him.
She saved her money to buy her babies
the very best.
But on at least one occasion, she was apprehended for
shoplifting in a Falls Church department store.
She had hidden some Feltman Brothers toddlers' outfits in her
clothes.
Among the most expensive children's clothing made, Feltman Brothers'
garments were far beyond Pat's budget.
Margureitte was aghast.
"That terrible, terrible, rude store detective
took her to the front office and just treated her very, very badly.
We
could have sued them, but we decided not to."
Things in Falls Church were not going well.
Ronnie was having
convulsions, which would continue regularly until he was almost twelve,
and Pat wrote that no one in the entire state of Virginia was even
civil to her.
When Margureitte heard her daughter's version of her
life in Falls Church, she insisted that she move home to Atlanta at
once.
Of Margureitte's two children, her son was the one who truly needed
some bolstering, but he rarely asked for help and Pat's demands drowned
him out.
Now a handsome and powerfully built young man, Kent had come
home from Germany with a broken heart.
He had fallen completely in love-the all-out, noprotective-walls first
love that happens only once.
The girl was German, tall and
flaxen-haired.
Her name was Marianne Krauss.
She loved Kent too.
She was an extremely nice girl and she wanted to marry him.
But she
couldn't even imagine leaving her parents to go off to America
forever.
Nor could Kent face never going home again.
In the end, when he left
Germany he was as alone as he had ever been.
His troubles piled up and he occasionally drank too much.
Sober, Kent was as gentle as most really big men are; he had nothing to
prove.
His strength was awesome.
Even a little tipsy, he was
good-natured.
But if he drank a few bottles of beer or too many rum