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
and a new Cadillac every four years.
Eunice had beautiful things,
nicer than a lot of officers' wives.
Privately, Margureitte found it all a little vulgar, but there it
was.
Colonel and Mrs. Radcliffe accepted the inevitable.
It could have
been worse.
Eunice was very well thought of in enlisted circles, and
active in.
projects to benefit army dependents.
A wedding was hastily planned, to be held in the Fort McPherson chapel
on September 6, 1952.
"All they had in common was physical
attraction," Margureitte later commented ruefully.
"Pat was vastly
superior in IQ."
The colonel had wanted her to go to a fine school to
study art; she was so talented.
He felt Pat's future was ruined by
this unfortunate marriage.
Pat wore a white satin gown with a three-quarter-length skirt and an
off-the-shoulder neckline edged in net ruching.
A short veil fell from
her Juliet cap and she carried white orchids.
Her white satin pumps
matched her gown.
She looked lovely and at least twenty-two.
The
bridegroom was less regal in a suit two sizes too big for him, a white
carnation boutonniere, and saddle shoes-which he had forgotten to
change before the ceremony.
Gil looked like a kid dressed in his dad's
clothes.
The newlyweds had very little time together.
To support his growing
family, Gil-whom Eunice called Junior-enlisted in the army.
He was
sent almost immediately to Korea, and Pat moved back home with her
parents.
Nothing had really changed.
Margureitte and Clifford took
care of her, and she used her allotment check for things she wanted.
Of course, there was a baby on the way.
Pat was adamant that she
wouldn't go to an army hospital.
She didn't want to be on an assembly
line and have some doctor she didn't even know walk in at the last
minute to deliver her baby.
She had heard the army even made the new
mothers get up and take care of their own babies and eat their meals in
the cafeteria!
She saved her own money so she could have her baby in a
nice civilian hospital, Georgia Baptist.
Unfortunately, she thought
she was in labor twice and was rushed to the hospital each time.
As a
result, Pat had spent all her savings before she was really ready to
have her baby, so she ended up having to go to an army hospital
anyway.
When Pat went into actual labor on March 4, 1953, junior Taylor was far
away, but her mother and the colonel drove her to the hospital.
She
rolled in the backseat, sobbing about how cruel Gil was to put her
through such pain.
After assuring the doctors that she had extensive
nurse's training, Margureitte was allowed to be right there in the
delivery room with Pat.
It was, perhaps, the first time that
Margureitte was unable to absorb all her daughter's pain.
The child was finally born, a dark-haired baby girl.
Susan.
Her mother was sixteen, her grandmother thirty-four.
"How I loved that
baby," Margureitte recalled in a gentle, pained voice nearly four
decades later.
"I don't know what happened.
Susan just became pure
evil.
just evil.
Of course, I can't forgive that."
But the early affection between Susan and her grandmother was mutual.
For the first three decades of her life, Susan found Margureitte the
"sweetest, kindest person in my whole life.
I thought she was
perfect."
Unlike his sister, Kent was a diligent student and got excellent
grades.
He was thirteen when Pat and her baby returned from the
hospital.
He adored his little niece and gingerly held Susan, grinning
with delight at how small she was.
Pat let him play with the baby, but
she was vaguely annoyed whenever he was around.
Pat was a married
woman and a mother, only visiting in her parents' house, marking time
until Gil came home; it wasn't really her home anymore.
But she didn't
see it that way.
As always, she viewed her brother as the
interloper.
Kent's presence grated on Pat because he took so much of her mother's
time away from her and her baby.
If it weren't for him, things would
have been perfect.
Margureitte did the cooking and the housework and
rocked Susan when she was fussy.
It was almost as if Pat hadn't gotten
married at all, and she liked the cozy feeling of being a little girl
again.
When she became a grandmother, Margureitte took on another name.
Clifford still called her Margureitte or "Reit," or sometimes "Reichen"
with a German touch of endearment.
Her sisters continued to call her
Margureitte.
But soon tiny Susan would call her "Boppo."
The colonel was called "Papa."
Boppo and Papa fell easily into the
role of matriarch and patriarch of an expanding family.
It became them, and they seemed transformed overnight from youth to
late middle age even though they still made a handsome pair.
They would have been happy to stay on permanent assignment at Fort
McPherson in Atlanta.
Pat liked everything about the home Margureitte and the colonel made.
No matter how many times they were reassigned by the army, Margureitte
always managed to decorate with taste and elan.
Sometimes they lived in big old barrackslike barns, and sometimes on
bases where the officers' housing was splendid.
The Radcliffes had
collected exquisite pieces in their travels around the worldfine china,
paintings, objets dart, Japanese screens, silver tea sets, thick rugs,
and gleaming furniture.
Later, when the colonel's mother passed away,
her full china closets and family heirlooms came to the Radcliffes.
Margureitte had vowed to live graciously a long time back, and she had
succeeded.
Wives of younger officers saw her charm and poise as a goal
to aim for.
Why wouldn't Pat want to live in her family home, instead
of in a cramped apartment or some tinny trailer somewhere?
She had
grown up with the very best.
She had been groomed her whole life for
elegance.
Moreover, she had been imbued with the absolute belief that
she was special.
She was, after all, a colonel's only daughter.
And Kent-as far as he knew-was a colonel's son.
There was nothing he
wanted more than to enlist one day in the army himself.
He thought that would please his father.
Kent shot up like a young sapling in his mid-teens.
Almost overnight,
he went from being a little blond boy to an awkward, acne-scarred
teenager.
With his thick glasses and the burr haircut that accentuated
his protruding ears, his appearance gave scant promise of the
good-looking man he would become.
He competed on the swimming team in
high school; he had the wide shoulders and flexible muscles for it.
He
was much taller then the colonel, but he still looked to Cliff for
approval.
He rarely got it.
After a year, Gil Taylor came home from Korea unscathed and reclaimed
his family.
He moved Pat and Susan to Shirley, Massachusetts, to his
next post.
There, they lived in a minuscule apartment, and Pat seemed
to enjoy playing at being a housewife.
Like most young service families, they had almost nothing in the way of
furniture or possessions: a cheap orange and avocado upholstered couch
with maple-stained arms, triangular Formica end tables, and Melmac
dinnerware.
Gil had filled out.
He was tanned and muscular and probably thirty
pounds heavier than the skinny kid Pat had married, an attractive
man.
Pat soon became pregnant again.
On June 14, 1955-just over two years
after Susan was born-she gave birth to a second daughter, Deborah
Dawn.
Boppo and Papa were stationed in Gary, Indiana, and Margureitte worried
herself sick about how her little girl was doing.
Pat was only seventeen, with two babies to take care of; it seemed she
faced one traumatic situation after another.
She had always had a
flair for the dramatic; she experienced no emotion moderately.
If she
and Gil ran low on food toward the end of the month, she translated
their predicament into abject poverty and called home for help.
There
were many "emergencies," like the time Pat was "overcome" by paint
fumes when she tried to brighten up her apartment.
She wrote her
mother that they didn't have enough to eat-that sometimes it got so bad
they had to scavenge for windfalls in apple orchards.
"If we can
afford meat at all, it's only a half pound of hamburger or one pork
chop.
. . . If there's one piece of bread, the kids get it."
That
just tore Margureitte up inside, the thought that her daughter and the
babies might be hungry.
It seemed as though Boppo was constantly burning up the highways
between Gary, Indiana, and Shirley, Massachusetts.
She was horrified
on her first visit to see where Pat and Gil were living; their
apartment was in a building whose other residents looked highly
suspicious to her.
She reported to the colonel, "Cliff, I believe
they're living in a whorehouse.
It's not a fit place for them."
She had returned home alone only reluctantly that time.
But then Pat
called and said she had almost choked to death on a pork chop-served at
one of her "single pork chop" meals-and Margureitte drove all night to
get to her.
This time she insisted that Pat and the babies must come
back to Indiana with her, and Gil let them go.
Margureitte told her