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
deliberately.
On occasion, she fought physically with neighbor women, scratching and
pulling hair.
She told Gil that their husbands were flirting with her
and hinted that some had gone further.
She was furious when he seemed
doubtful.
A theme was emerging.
More and more, Pat portrayed herself as an
innocent beauty besieged by sex-crazed males who couldn't keep their
hands off her.
Gil had heard so many of his wife's dramatic stories
and seen the most minuscule of problems blown into huge scenes too many
times.
That was just Pat.
She craved Upheaval, hysteria, and
emotional fireworks.
And she had to be the center of it all.
He was
an unsophisticated man and at a loss to know how to deal with her.
Usually things blew over if he just ducked and sought cover.
They seldom had a pleasant family outing.
When they took weekend trips
to Lake Kimsey, Pat accused Gil of drinking.
Actually, he scarcely drank at all-and if he did, he had to sneak off
to drink one beer.
Or they would be in the midst of a happy picnic in
an Alpine meadow when Pat would cry out that she had eaten bad
mushrooms and been poisoned, probably fatally.
It was not the stuff of
which happy memories are made.
Invariably, their holidays ended in
shambles.
When her parents were nearby for backup, Pat could maintain a
tentatively even keel, but alone, she invariably turned day-today life
into chaos.
She begged Boppo and Papa to get a transfer back to
Frankfurt.
She needed them.
Of course they would come.
Clifford Radcliffe put in at once for a new
assignment.
But things continued to go wrong until they arrived.
A
huge grandfather's clock fell over on Susan, but luckily she was just
far enough past it when it fell that she was scarcely hurt.
Her mother
explained that the uneven floors of the army housing had caused it to
tilt.
The Radcliffes were soon in Frankfurt.
Their headlong rushes to come
to Pat's rescue were, in a sense, their finest hours.
It seemed to
them that it was what they were meant to do.
If it also meant that
Margureitte had to give up any semblance of a life of her own, well,
she would make the sacrifice.
Her daughter came before anything.
This
time, however, even her mother conceded that Pat was out of control and
had her committed to a hospital for a psychiatric evaluation.
But not
for long.
Indignantly, Margureitte proclaimed the doctor "as cuckoo as
anyone I ever saw!
He actually asked Pat if she saw pink elephants!
Imagine .
With her parents nearby, Pat seemed much better.
Then there was a
blowup with Gil, and Pat and the children moved in with Boppo and Papa
in their house in Falkenstein.
She expected that Gil would come to beg
her forgiveness, and she would eventually relent and give him one more
chance.
When he didn't, she was furious.
"Your father's no good," she
told Debbie and Susan.
"He lost your German shepherd gambling."
Boppo bought two poodle puppies for Susan and Debbie, but they both
died.
Their grandmother felt so sorry for them as they sobbed, bereft,
that she bought them two more.
"I can't stand to see your
brokenhearted little faces," she said.
This time, the puppies survived.
Pat wrote to Gil and told him he should come get her.
The children
missed him and they were too much for her to handle without him.
More
than that, the men in her parents' neighborhood frightened her.
She
hinted that someone was trying to kill her.
She wrote her husband that she lived in terror of being raped.
She prophesied that Gil would live to regret it if he left her alone.
There was no question that men noticed twenty-six-year-old Pat
Taylor.
With her clear green eyes, pouty lips, and slight overbite, and the
sensual recklessness she exuded, men always looked twice-even though
their second look elicited only a cold stare from her.
But it was
doubtful that she was being sexually stalked.
It was even less likely
that anyone was plotting to murder her.
She had cried wolf too many
times.
Susan and Debbie liked Germany and, at ten and eight, they weren't
particularly- disturbed by their mother's mood swings.
They had never known anything else.
However, one day Susan and a
German friend Dorte, also ten, returned to her grandparents' house
earlier than they were expected.
Dorte skipped up the path ahead of
Susan but stopped suddenly.
When she whirled back toward Susan, she
had a bewildered look on her face.
She pointed toward a bedroom window
and said, "Your mutta-your mutta."
"What about my mother?"
Susan asked.
"Look-in the window."
The little girls peeked in the window and saw
Pat, alone, hitting herself all over her body with pots and pans.
Hard.
Susan was embarrassed.
She couldn't explain it to Dorte because
she didn't understand it herself.
Soon they heard sirens and saw German police cars with their lights
flashing screech to a halt outside the house.
The next morning, Pat's
body was a mass of bruises, scratches, and welts.
She looked as if she had been run over by a truck.
She gave a
statement to the German detectives about a salesman who had forced his
way in, beaten her, and then sexually attacked her.
"Boppo and Papa took her to the hospital and notified my father," Susan
recalled.
"I guess he believed that men had been hurting he r. He
showed up the next day, and we went back to live with him."
But there
were no physical signs that Pat had been raped.
No semen.
No labial
or vaginal contusions, none of the characteristic inner thigh bruising
that is found in rape victims.
Susan said nothing about what she had seen in the window.
She was ashamed, but she didn't really know why.
. . .
Pat and Gil had been married over a decade.
He was no longer a
teenager in love.
He had been through the mill with Pat's theatrics
and bizarre stories-but he loved her, and he loved his three
children.
When Pat was sweet to him, no man could ask for more.
If anything, she
was even more beautiful than when he married her.
It seemed sometimes to Gil that if he could find out what it was that
would make Pat happy and serene-and then give it to herthey could have
a good marriage.
He knew she needed to be around her family, and that
was a start.
When they left Germany in 1965 and flew to Fort Dix, New
Jersey, for reassignment, Margureitte and Clifford Radcliffe remained
in Germany, finishing the colonel's tour of duty there.
Gil wondered
how Pat would manage without them.
After all, they had asked for the
Frankfurt post so they could be near her, and now she was heading back
to the States.
But it worked out all right.
Pat was delighted when they were sent to
Fort Bragg in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Mama Slier was there and
all of her beloved aunts.
If her mother and stepfather weren't close
by, she had, at least, the second string.
Gil and Pat even bought a little brick house near Fort Bragg.
The house, of course, wasn't anywhere near what Pat had envisioned.
She had become increasingly obsessed with having her own estate-a
plantation, a lavish spread of green fields and horse barns with a main
house where she could entertain.
She had never been able to take care
of even an apartment without her mother's help, but she knew she would
be happy if she could nly live the way Scarlett O'Hara had lived at
Tara before the 0
Civil War.
While driving through the countryside near Warsaw one day, Pat saw the
house she really wanted.
It was a Victorian mansion surrounded by a
wrought-iron fence.
The porch roof was supported with tall columns,
there was a fountain in the front yard, and even a carriage house-but
it was in terrible condition, with eeling paint and a sagging roof.
The rose garden was overgrown with weeds and the foundation listed to
one side.
Pat had to have it.
Gil checked it out and, despite the house's
decrepit condition, the asking price was far beyond anything an
enlisted man could manage.
He tried to explain that to his wife, but
Pat sulked: If only she could have that house, she would be happy.
If
he loved her, he would find a way to get it for her.
Whatever Gil did for her, it wasn't enough.
Later, when Pat showed the house to Margureitte, her mother paled and
said, "Pat, are you crazy?"
The house was a stone's throw from where John Cam Prigeon still lived
with his family.
Pat probably did not know the significance of that
proximity at the time, but her mother was vehement that Warsaw, North
Carolina, was no place for her to even think about living.
There is no evidence that Pat Taylor had had anything but imaginary
encounters with men other than her husband.
She used her stories of
men's unwelcome attentions to keep Gil in line.
But at Fort Bragg, she ran into her old boyfriend.
He was now a
captain, while Gil was only a sergeant.
Gil had always been jealous of