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
"We are all so fortunate," Margureitte wrote in a booklet she typed
herself in 1991 to give out at the twenty-fifth anniversary of the
Siler Family Reunion, "to have had such a wonderful heritage.
None of
we children can blame any of our mistakes on our childhood.
. . . I
remember when we had a bad storm how Mother would gather us all around
and sing 'Nearer My God to Thee,' while Daddy went to the door and
watched the storm.
Mother said Dad was daring the Lord to hit him."
Perhaps more than most families, the Silers had their idiosyncracies,
and they were all very strong-minded.
Thelma, who was a perfectly
healthy child, refused to walk until she was five years old.
When the
Rev.
Tasso Siler dropped dead in his own yard in 1960 at the age of
eighty-one, hundreds of mourners attended his funeral and his widow
took to a wheelchair in her grief.
She was not ill; like Thelma, she
simply decided not to walk.
Although she eventually got back on her
feet, she never got over his death.
But while there might be
eccentricities, arguments, recriminations, and even banishments that
took place inside the Siler family, no one on the outside murt know.
Under the most intense pressure, the Siler women stared back at the
world with a look of inflexible serenity that was inviolable: "the
crystal gaze.
Myrtle Margureitte was next to last in birth order, and arguably the
most beautiful of the Reverend and Mrs.
Siler's children.
She had a heart-shaped face with a high rounded forehead, huge blue
eyes, and full lips.
Coming into puberty in the darkest years of the
Great Depression in the sexually repressed household of a Baptist
minister, Margureitte was something of a rebel.
Her rebellion and her
fertility would cause her gentle and loyal mother pain.
According to family lore, Margureitte ran off to Wilmington with Robert
Lee Vann when she was only fifteen and became pregnant.
Vann was a
slight youth, some five years older than Margureitte.
It is not clear
whether they ever lived together, but on March 16, 1936, when
Margureitte was sixteen, she gave birth in her parents' house to her
first child, a ten-pound stillborn girl.
She wept and named her dead baby Roberta.
Bereft, she soon became pregnant again.
Margureitte felt that somehow
the dead Roberta might have lived if she had only been born in a
hospital.
She was insistent that her next child would be, and so,
indeed, she was.
The baby was born on August 22, 1937, in the J. W.
M.
Hospital in Wilmington, North Carolina, a city that stands just where
the Cape Fear River widens into the Cape Fear inlet on the Atlantic
Ocean.
The baby girl came into the world at 6:18 that morning and her
young mother rejoiced that she was alive and healthy.
Margureitte
labored long to bring forth her second ten-pound female child.
This
was Patricia, a replacement, some said.
The lost Roberta found, some
said.
Margureitte gave her maiden name as Myrtle Margureitte Siler on the
birth certificate, and her age as twenty.
She was really just eighteen
when Patty was born.
She said that she had been married for three
years to the listed father, Robert Lee Vann, twenty-three, and that he
was employed in a radio store.
But some family members wondered
whether the Vann boy was really Patty's father.
If they ever existed, the records of Margureitte's marriage and divorce
to and from Vann were lost.
One of Vann's brothers, younger by a
decade, could not recall that Robert Lee was ever married to
Margureitte.
He remembered that his brother worked on the railroad but
never in a radio store.
His memory may well have been faulty; he would
have been under ten when his older brotherwas with Margureitte.
Although Margureitte has said that Vann was her husband and the father
of her children, Robert Vann may have been an expedient red herring.
Some of her family believed that Margureitte had fallen in love with a
married man.
He was a farmer and carpenter in Warsaw, North Carolina,
and his name was John Cam Prigeon, a huge young man with blond hair,
full lips, and protruding ears.
And he was a terror.
Prigeon was as wild as Margureitte's father was
pious.
A drinker of spirits and a brawler on occasion, he walked along
any path he chose.
His wife knew of Margureitte, the preacher's
beautiful daughter, but she said nothing.
Her husband had a violent
temper.
In her strict Baptist household, Margureitte's latest misadventure must
have been greeted with dismay.
But the family undoubtedly rallied
around her, thinking she would get "Cam" Out of her system.
She was,
after all, a Siler, and the teenage mother and her new baby girl
returned to Warsaw in that strange blazing summer of 1937 to live with
her parents.
The headlines had been full of disasters and tragedies
for months: five hundred Texas children perished in a school explosion,
Amelia , Earhart was lost over the Pacific Ocean, the Hindenburg
dirigible melted in a fireball of burning hydrogen gas, the king of
England abdicated, movie sex queen Jean Harlow succumbed to uremic
poison at twenty-six, and war was brewing in Europe and Asia.
It was also the year that Margaret Mitchell won the Pulitzer Prize for
Gone With the Wind, at once a historic re-creation of the gracious life
of the Old South and a terrifying tale of its destruction during the
Civil War.
Its beautiful heroine, a survivor and woman of intricate
wiles, would become Patricia's life model.
Margureitte had to work, and so Mary Siler raised Patty for the first
five years of her life.
Patty called her "Mama," and her grandmother
Siler doted on little Patty to the point of obsession.
Patty shared
Mary's life and Mary's bed.
She had only to voice her every wish and
it was granted.
The little girl was exquisite.
She grew thick taffy-colored curls and
her eyes were bigger even than Margureitte's and as green as new leaves
in April.
Mama Siler kept her in rumy dotted Swiss dresses,
sunbonnets, and white Mary janes.
Her aunt Ednawho was so much older
than Margureitte that she was more like a mother than a sister-sewed
every stitch of the child's clothing.
Everyone who saw her said she was much prettier than Shirley Temple.
And she was.
Mary Siler made Patty the center of her life.
Each of her own thirteen
children paled beside her golden grandchild, "Next to God," she often
said, "I love Patty more than anything in the world."
There was always
fruit from the orchard and vegetables brought by parishioners, but
Patty would eat nothing but pancakes.
Her grandmother gave up trying to feed her vegetables, eggs, and
cereal, and served her flapjacks three times a day.
Of all the grandchildren living in or visiting at the parsonage, Patty
was special.
When the other youngsters clamored for Cokes, Mary
explained, "No one can have it-because there's only one."
And then she
would beckon Patty into the back room and surreptitiously give her that
single Coca-Cola.
When the children were naughty, they were sent out
to find their own switch and were whipped.
But Patty was never
spanked.
Instead, her grandmother picked her up gently and whispered,
"Now bend over, and be sure and cry real loud."
She could not bring
herself to strike Patty, so she only pretended to hit her.
While her mother cared for Patty, Margureitte worked at a number of
jobs, looking for a career that would lead her into the life-style she
sought.
Born into the country preacher's world of meager circumstances
and self-sacrifice, she yearned for gracious living, fine things and a
lovely home.
She was clever and quick, and she had always wondered
what it would be like to be part of the horsey set, riding to the hunt,
performing in shows with jodhpurs and a well-cut jacket.
She lopged
for romance and true love, but her days were spent working at a dull
job as a clerk.
As fertile as her mother, Margureitte once again conceived, her third
pregnancy before she was twenty.
This time, Margureitte made no pretense of a husband.
She agonized
over the few choices open to her.
She had to work and Mama Siler
couldn't take care of two toddlers.
Margureitte would have to give
this baby up for adoption.
She arranged to stay at the Florence
Crittendon Home at 4759 Reservoir Road in Washington, D.C. Required to
work both before and after her delivery to pay for her board, room, and
medical care, Margureitte chose to take the training the home offered
in practical nursing.
It was hard work and arduous for a pregnant
girl, but she was then and always would be a woman who put the best
face on things.
"I have nurse's training," she explained confidently
even fifty years later.
"I'm not a registered nurse, you understand,
but I have two years'training."
On October 10, 1939, Margureitte was at full term.
She was given a
shot of Pituitrin to start labor.
"Pit" usually triggers hard and
frequent contractions.
After twenty-four hours, a drained Margureitte
gave birth to a nine-pound six-ounce son.
The baby's hair was white
blond and his features were bold and masculine.
He looked nothing at
all like her delicately pretty daughter.
Some people thought he was
the image of Cam.
She named him Reginald Kent Vann and would call him
Kent.
She loved him, and could not give hLr baby boy up, not once she had
held him.
That was so like Margureitte; right or wrong, she would