Read Dead by Sunset: Perfect Husband, Perfect Killer? Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #Criminology
"We're still great friends today," she said.
"We just couldn't be
married."
Oeep down, Dana knew she was pretty, but she wondered if she had
anything else to offer.
Her own husband hadn't cared enough about her
to come home more than once a month, even during the honeymoon phase of
their brief marriage.
Her confidence was shaken, and she was
particularly vulnerable to men who responded positively to her.
She
dated some, men came on to her everywhere she turned.
There was one
man, Nick Ronzini,* who sold men's clothes in the department store
where she worked.
Dana liked Nick a lot and he was very handsome, but
when he drank, his personality changed.
Dana was at a crossroads in 1990.
If nothing came along to change her
life, she might stay with Nick.
Or she might go home to southern
Oregon and stay with her family.
As it turned out, somethingþsomeone
þdid come along: Brad Cunningham.
"He called me and told me that he
remembered me," Dana said, "even though there had been people standing
in line' for the nanny job."
She had almost forgotten that she had
applied for the job.
When she went to the Dunthorpe house for her second interview, Brad
told her that he was separated from his wife, Dr. Sara Gordon.
"We
aren't getting along," he said.
"I live here with my sons."
Dana assumed that the huge home with its sprawling grounds and
two-story guest house belonged to Brad.
She found him "very
distinguished."
Brad was forty-one in the spring of 1990, but he didn't look it.
He was running ten miles a day and was in peak condition.
He dressed
in expensive dark suits and drove a new (rented) Mercedes.
"He was so
charming," Dana said, "but he was humble, too, and quiet."
When Brad told her that she had won the nanny job over all the other
applicants, Dana was thrilled, but she looked upon it only as a job.
She would care for his three little boys during the week and live in
the guest house, but she planned to continue her job selling cosmetics
on the weekends.
Sara had to sell the Dunthorpe house.
The cash drain of the bakery and
then the bistro was bad enough, but the payments on the big house, not
to mention the taxes, were more than she could handleþeven if she
worked twenty-four hours a day.
But Brad blocked her every attempt to
sell the house.
It was outrageous, and it was ridiculous, but Sara
understood.
She knew Brad's charisma, and she had learned how frightening and
relentless he could be to get what he wanted.
If she had not had Jack
Kincaid to back her up, she might have buckled under the pressure.
Sara's money had paid for the Dunthorpe house and the Riverplace
apartment, but she no longer lived in either.
In truth, she really
didn't live anywhere, she was a woman in hiding.
The few items she had
managed to take out of the Dunthorpe house were in the Riverplace
apartmentþbut she wasn't.
Instead she slept at Providence Hospital
feeling some slight sense of protection with her coworkers surrounding
her.
She never slept in the suite she had shared so many times with
Brad and the little boys.
Brad knew where that was, and there was
always the chance he might encounter some new employee who didn't know
about him and talk his way into the suite.
Sara knew what a glib
talker he was.
So she slept behind doors that were behind doors that
were behind doors, deep in the bowels of the hospital.
If anyone
called for her, anyone, the ground rules now demanded that the caller
never be told where she was.
All of her calls were transferred to
trusted friends inside Providence.
Only then would the call be passed
on to her.
Once again Sara's work was her life, just as it had been when she first
met Brad in 1986.
However, by 1990 she no longer took her life for
granted.
The memories of being able to concentrate on her work, to
walk without fear into the parking lot, to live without fear in her own
home, were only thatþmemories.
Somehow Brad always seemed to be aware
of where she was.
Sara never knew what she might find.
Sometimes she found black spray
paint along the sides of both her carsþan Audi and a Volvoþ sometimes
splashes of paint across their hoods, the edges drying into segmented
clots, the way blood dries.
The cars were white and she saw the damage
immediately.
It didn't matter where she parked.
Once, when she had
spent the night at a girlfriend's house, she found that twelve nails
had been pounded into her tires.
For some reason the tires hadn't gone
flat and she was able to drive to a tire dealer and have them
repaired.
But worstþbecause of what they symbolizedþwere the flower petals.
Some unseen hand had sprinkled rose petals all over her car, as if
casting flowers on a grave.
Even when she went to bed in one of the on-call suites deep in the
inner sanctum of the hospital, Sara didn't sleep well.
It was hard not
to think of all she had lost.
Most of all, she missed her sons.
"If I
hadn't been afraid of Brad, I would have sought custody of the boysþbut
I didn't dare."
Sara harbored the hope that she might have Jess, Michael, and Phillip
for three weeks in June.
Seeing the boys meant seeing Brad, but she
wasn't afraid of him in the daylight.
It was the unexpected that
frightened her.
Brad would never let her have the children for long
periods, but he allowed short visits.
Meanwhile, their divorce
proceedings inched along.
An uncontested divorce in Oregon took only
three months, but Brad claimed federal law guidelines and said his
pending bankruptcy gave him an automatic stay.
And, as usual, he
changed attorneys.
It would be fall at least before Sara could hope to
have her divorce finalized.
On June 10, Sara met Dana Malloy when she returned the boys to the
Dunthorpe house after they had visited her.
The two women liked each
other, and Sara went away somewhat relieved at Brad's choice of a
caregiver for the boys.
She noticed one thing that shouldn't have
surprised her.
Dana looked a lot like herself, same coloring, same
general facial features.
Dana was taller, of course, and about ten
years younger than she was, but their resemblance was remarkable.
Sara
was glad she liked Dana.
But if she hadn't, it wouldn't have mattered
to Brad.
He no longer listened to anything she said.
Dana had settled happily into her job at the Dunthorpe house.
If she
couldn't have babies of her own, Brad's sons were great little kids and
she soon became very attached to them.
She looked after Jess, Michael,
and Phillip, saw that they got to school, cooked, washed dishes, and
made the beds.
The work wasn't hard, and Dana enjoyed being with this
little motherless family.
She did not know, of course, that there had
been two mothers whom Brad had ruthlessly cut out of their lives.
Before a month had passed, Dana was surprised but a little pleased,
too, when it became obvious that Brac!
was attracted to her.
"When I
went to work for him, I had my own life," she said.
"I had my weekend
job.
He didn't even know me but, within a month, he didn't want me
working weekends.
He got obsessed with meþI guess that's how you'd
describe it.
He put me on a pedestal.
He wouldn't let me make beds or
wash the dishes.
After I was with him thirty days, he hired Molly
Maid' to come in.
But cleaning was supposed to bepart of my job."
Dana believed that Brad was a wealthy businessman.
She had no idea
that the house they lived in belonged to Sara and that Brad had no
income at allþbeyond $1,608 a month he collected in Social Security
survivors' benefits for Cheryl Keeton's boys, and the sporadic payments
that he got from the Colville tribe.
Brad began to court Dana avidly and she was dazzled.
"He ordered these
exotic flowers flown in from Hawaiiþflowers I'd never seen before.
I didn't even know you could buy flowers that way."
The five of
themþBrad, Dana, Jess, Michael, and Phillipþwent out to dinner often as
a family.
It was pleasant and fun, and Dana found herself falling in love with
Brad.
It wasn't much more than a month after she began working for him
that they became intimate.
"He was a wonderful lover þa passionate
lover.
When he kissed you, you believed you were the only woman in the
world for him."
Dana had been ignored by her husband, but now she had become the center
of Brad's universe, completely unaware of the bitter divorce and the
terrible struggle he and Sara were having over the house.
Dana never
knew about things like that, Brad took care of his own business
affairs.
He dictated what they would do, where they would go, how she would
dress, whom she would see.
She was so happy to be with him that she
didn't notice how short her leash was becoming.
Life with Brad was sheer joy, but it wasn't perfect.
Dana's awe of him
lasted for a relatively brief time, and some things really bothered
her.
She didn't like the way Brad disciplined his sons, even though he
seemed to love them.
She watched him administer the precise number of
"swats" that he had toted up during the boys' lapses when they were
away from home.
Once they knew that punishment was awaiting them, most