Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
told her that Cheryl had slept with her husband.
It may have been
true, it may not.
Either way, the wife's reaction was not what Brad
had expected.
She was not hysterical nor was she grateful to Brad for
his report.
With impeccable class, she called Cheryl and asked her to
convey a message to her husband.
"Just tell him that I don't care to
talk to him for several days.
He'll understand."
Mortifiedþand
puzzledþCheryl passed on the message.
Annoyed that his sabotage hadn't worked, Brad went a step further.
He contacted Stuart Hennessey, who had worked with Cheryl in Seattle,
and invited him out for a drink in the bar at the Alexis Hotel near the
Garvey, Schubert offices.
Hennessey would remember the encounter as a
"weird experience."
Brad told him that he and Cheryl were separated
and quickly went on to give Hennessey offensive details about Cheryl's
supposed promiscuity.
Hennessey stared back at him, disbelieving and
disgusted.
"Then he asked how the firm was doing," Hennessey recalled.
"And he
asked how much money I made."
What Brad really wanted to know, of course, was how much money Cheryl
was making and how much her retirement fund was worth.
Hennessev stood
up to leave and told Brad he didn't want to discuss it þthat was
private information.
He left Brad sitting with two untouched drinks
while he went back to his office, shaking his head in shock at Brad's
gall and crudeness.
Hennessey called Cheryl to alert her to what Brad
was saying.
"Cheryl was a strong person," he said, "but she was crying.
She said,
Stu, he's trying to ruin me."
" Hennessey didn't know how to help her, beyond telling her that her
friends were behind her and wouldn't believe Brad's lies.
Neither reaction was what Brad had expected, and for the moment he was
thrown off stride.
He resented Cheryl's independence and success.
He had hoped to humiliate her and ruin her career.
She was humiliated,
but her job was never in danger.
She was also puzzled.
If Brad had
succeeded in getting her fired, who did he think was going to support
them?
It was her salary that kept them afloat.
She had seen him do
this beforeþact out of rage, and spite himself in the process.
Cheryl
was horribly embarrassed by Brad's vicious lies, but she held her head
up and her career never missed a beat.
Even so, Susan could see that the enmity in Cheryl's relationship with
Brad was intensifying.
And as it did, she saw, too, that the essence
that was Cheryl had begun, finally, to disintegrate.
As water
eventually erodes stone after an eon of continual dripping, Brad's
relentless siege against Cheryl was working its devastation.
She had
been so strong or so long.
But now she was growing thinner and
thinner, toying with her food and only pretending to eat.
Still,
through sheer force of will, she was able to compartmentalize her life
so that she could concentrate on her work and take care of her boys.
Brad's affair with Lily Saarnen had continued, even as he pointed
accusing fingers at Cheryl.
In late fall Lily was told that she
needed a kidney transplant.
Brad was tremendously solicitous, so much
so that he offered to pay her medical bills.
He gave her four thousand
dollars.
She had the transplant operation on November 28, 1985, and testifying
in a legal hearing some time later, Lily had difficulty remembering if
Brad had actually paid for her surgery.
Staring into Brad's dark eyes
from her position on the witness chair, she equivocated.
She thought
that their affair had lasted somewhere between six months and a year.
She couldn't really remember.
Lily did remember that Brad had paid the rent on her apartment in the
Madison Tower for some time.
Although her ground-floor unit wasn't as
expensive as the eighteenth-floor apartment he would soon rent, it
wasn't cheap either.
But if Brad proved to be a friend in need, his
passion for Lily faded after her surgery.
The immunosuppressant
medicine she had to take had side effects that repulsed Brad.
"She
grew facial hair and that turned me off," he said later.
And so Lily had gone on to her relationship with Dr. Clay Watson, the
surgeon at Providence, although she remained in her apartment at the
Madison Tower until late fall of 1986.
Earlier that year she had
introduced Brad to Dr. Sara Gordon, and apparently there were no hard
feelings.
Lily and Brad were like dancers who changed partners when
the song changed.
Lily did seem a little chagrined, however, when
she later learned that Brad was having an affair with Marnie, his
teenage baby-sitter, at the same time he was sleeping with her.
Lily had first known Brad in Salem when he was hired by Citizens'
Savings.
And then Brad, Lily, a secretary, and a young lawyer named
Karen Aaborg * were transferred to the Lake Oswego branch of the
bank.
Karen would later testify that federal bank examiners had questioned
the Lake Oswego books, the branch's president and most of its directors
had been summarily fired, and Brad was eievated to a position of
extreme trust as he and his three female assistants evaluated the
extent of the damage.
They soon suspected that they w70uld only be
tidying up loose ends and closing the branch down.
It was doubtful
that the commercial loan division in Lake Oswego was going to
survive.
But as long as the branch was still open, Brad was the boss.
He was also a sultan with his own little harem.
Brad had scarcely
ended his affair with l.ilya when he became very close to Karen
Aaborg.
Another man might have felt ill at ease working in the same small
office as two of his girlfriends, but it didn't bother Brad.
Lily was
aware that her ex-lover was engaged in daily disputes with his wife.
Karen was not þat least for a time.
When she first went to work for
Brad, she knew almost nothing about his personal life.
Brad had hired Karen to work for him in Salem in the summer of 1985.
She was very young, barely out of law school, and she was Brad's type:
small, attractive, slender, smart.
He liked blond or light brown hair
and pretty, small-featured faces.
At the bank her title was "Loan
Closer," and later Brad chose her to go with him and Lily to close the
Lake Oswego branch.
To Karen's somewhat naive eye, Brad seemed
happily married when she first went to work for him.
"It seemed to
change rather rapidly," she recalled.
It wasn't long before Karen
suspected that Brad and Lily had had a physical relationship, but she
wasn't positive.
It was just something in the way they exchanged glances, and the
sentences they left unfinished when she walked into an office where
they were.
She found out later that she had been right.
Brad told Karen even more about his personal life.
Although he had not
told Lily, he was quite open with Karen about his affair with his
sons' baby-sitter.
"Cheryl doesn't know," he said, grinning.
"We did
it at my house when the kids were napping and Cheryl was at work."
But
he lied to Karen when he said his liaison with his nineteen-year-old
babysitter was not a long-running affair.
"Cheryl was working, and I
wasn't.
That wTas before I came to Citizens'."
Karen soon sawþor rather heardþthat the Cunninghams' marriage was not a
happy one.
Cheryl often called the Lake Oswego branch of Citizens' and
Karen could tell from Brad's reaction that he was "pretty upset....
He would slam the phone down ... there was a lot of anger."
Indeed,
there was more rage surfacing in Brad than Karen could ever remember
seeing.
In his business world he was always in control, completely charming and
affable.
Whatever he and his wife were fighting over, Karen was
shocked by the violence involved.
Brad seemed to truly hate Cheryl,
and although Karen couldn't hear the other end of the conversation, she
appeared to hate him too.
Nevertheless, the phone scenes she overheard didn't diminish Brad's
charisrma for the young attorney.
It was easier for her to feel a
little sorry for him, his wife seemed to be a ranting shrew.
Except in
his phone conversations with Cheryl, Brad always struck Karen as such a
nice guy.
Karen sometimes went to a Portland tavern called Goose Hollow and one
evening she ran into Brad there.
They played Scrabble, apparently a
passion for him, and then he took her back to her apartment.
In his
version of their affair, he would recall that they had sex there for
the first time.
She would insist, however, that she was never actually
intimate with Brad until after he left the bank they both worked for.
And even then, she estimated that their affair had lasted only three or
four months.
Their friendship, however, continued.
It was odd.
Brad's wives all eventually came to hate his guts, his
mistresses remained in his stable of friends.
Estranged and former
wives became prey and stalking targets, mistresses were allowed to walk
away.
Brad never let up on his campaign to destroy Cheryl.
Along with his
other accusations in late 1985 and early 1986, he complained that he
had contracted chlamydia from her.
Technically at least, chlamydia is
a venereal disease, an infection usually transmitted through sexual
intercourse.
Righteously indignant, Brad obtained two prescriptions to