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
the man, even though he had long since been convinced that Susan was
his own offspring.
That evening there was a terrible scene when Pat and Gil went out to
eat with her aunts at Sneads Ferry.
Hearin' that the captain still
found their niece fascinating, the aunts urged her to encourage his
interest.
In the long run, they advised, she would have a much more
solid future than with an enlisted man.
They dismissed the fact of her
marriage to the father of her three children with the wave of a hand.
If being married to an officer would make Pat happy, then that was what
they wanted for her.
Gil might as well have been invisible.
Pat was miserable.
She didn't like marriage, and she didn't like being
alone either.
She wasn't interested in the captain.
What she really
wanted was to be home with Boppo and Papa.
The Radcliffes left Germany and were reassigned to Fort McPherson,
their last duty station before the colonel's retirement.
They bought a
small house near Atlanta, but when they realized that Pat and the
children were again planning to move in with them, they knew it
wouldn't be nearly large enough.
They found a house in East Point that Margureitte fell in love with, a
low brick rambler with white shutters.
It was set far back from the
street-Dodson Drive-and the half acre of land that came with it was
dotted with pine and maple trees.
After all the years of fixing up and
making do with army housing, Margureitte at last had her own home.
She
would have been happy to live on Dodson Drive for the rest of her
life.
The house was lovely and the neighborhood was very
upper-middle-class.
Kent came to live with them, at least part of the time, and a familiar
pattern was soon reestablished.
Every time Pat and her children
appeared to stay with Boppo and Papa, Kent obligingly moved out of
their way.
Space was always maintained for Pat.
Kent loved Pat's kids, but he tried to avoid her.
If she had been
known to hurt her cousins' feelings, she invariably aimed directly at
Kent's very gut.
"He tried to stay away from her," Susan recalled.
"But she'd follow him from room to room, and if he went outside, she'd
find him there too.
I think she was trying to drive him out of the
house forever.
He was so kind and nice, and all my girlfriends had
crushes on him.
They were only about twelve, but they could see how
handsome he was and they just followed him around."
Pat had no women friends.
She had never really had girlfriends, and
she had never missed them.
She really didn't like women.
She had
Boppo and Papa, and she spent a lot of time with her daughters.
Susan
and Debbie's friends could not believe that Pat was a mother; she
looked like a teenager, and she was so pretty.
To young visitors, the
ambience at the Radcliffes' house seemed wonderful: the great-looking
uncle, the darling young mother, and the grandma and grandpa who were
so kind.
Susan and Debbie were the envy of their friends.
Both of Pat's daughters would remember her as a good mother.
She led a
Brownie troop and she delivered her children to Sunday school and
picked them up afterward.
She gave wonderful birthday parties, and she
loved to decorate the house for special occasions.
And, of course, she
sewed for them.
She often told them how wonderful they were, and that
they could achieve anything they wanted in the whole wide world.
The one thing Pat wouldn't allow was anyone interfering with her three
children.
No one could discipline them but her, not even Boppo.
Susan
and Debbie and Ronnie belonged to her and she would see to their
raising.
But Boppo belonged to her too, and she wasn't going to allow
anyone to interfere with that.
Subtly but steadily, Pat began to edge
Kent out.
"She set him up so many times," Susan recalled.
"If she
wanted him out of the house, she'd start a fight and then make it look
as though he was at fault.
Then Papa would say, 'Kent, why don't you
just leave?"
Kent knew all too well that his presence aggravated Pat.
His mother
seemed incapable of opposing her.
Margureitte was pulled in too many
directions, and she was not a woman comfortable with direct
confrontation.
She had other ways of letting her family know she was
unhappy.
She would slam the kitchen cupboard doors loudly and mutter
under her breath.
This never bothered Pat; it made Kent terribly ill
at ease.
Driven too far, Margureitte also had a histrionic side.
She
would drop to her knees, hold out her arms, and cry, "What about me?
Why doesn't anyone ever ask me what I want?"
Kent took every word to heart.
He would gladly have given her what she
wanted-if only he could have.
He knew, he told Susan, that if he could
just be as good and kind as Boppo was, he would be a better person.
Susan and Debbie believed it too.
Their grandmother was the most selfless person they had ever known.
Kent usually assumed that his departure would ease things in the house,
and so he would leave.
Kent could look out for himself, but Pat was so
helpless.
Boppo had to take care of Pat; anyone could see that.
Choices are like dominoes, one tumbling against the next and then the
next until events go out of human control.
Margureitte would never
really have dominion over her life again.
That her own choices had set
the scene for tragedy would never occur to her.
She would only cry out
again and again, "Why doesn't anyone ever ask me what I want?"
No one ever would.
In 1964, Kent had reestablished his relationship with Cindi Alan, and
this time their friendship had blossomed into a romance.
At twenty-five, Kent was probably happier than he had been since he
fell in love with Marianne in Germany.
Cindi was attractive and blond
and she always had a smile on her face.
They were not physically
intimate, but Kent believed they soon would be.
They had fun
together.
Cindi was so proud to be seen with Kent.
Her parents approved.
His
parents approved.
They didn't see each other as often as they would have liked.
Cindi worked in Alabama and Kent worked in Atlanta, but they wrote all
the time and exchanged photographs.
Kent sent her a picture of himself
pensively staring into the distance.
He had pasted the words "Love"
and "Future!"
over the snapshot.
In November of 1964, he sent a picture and wrote on the back, Cindi,
Your long slim "Echo" continues to look for that very special day!
The day of beginning our lives together-May it come soon and bring us
our happiness.
Loving you!
Kent Another time he wrote, "I am missing you very much, Cindi.
Hurry home-so I can smile again."
One weekend when they were together, they put ten dollars' worth of
quarters into a "Three Photos for a Dollar" booth and osed together,
with Cindi perched on Kent's lap.
The last picture was of a tender
kiss.
They talked about getting married and even planned on having a little
girl.
They would call her Jessica.
Sometimes when Kent wrote to
Cindi, he sent a message to "Jessica," their secret child of the
future.
"Jessica, I know you are somewhere waiting out there.
A local paper featured a picture of Kent and Cindi and her parents on
the society page.
The copy read, Cindi Alan of Birmingham, Alabama,
who has been visiting her parents, Lt.
Col. and Mrs. Bertram Allanson
in Atlanta, was invited by a reporter to pose for a picture.
She in
turn invited her date, Kent Radcliffe, to stand by her side.
Just as
the camera shutter snapped, she extended her hand, displaying a
handsome ring.
And that is how the Alans learned that their daughter was engaged!
It was the stuff that warms the hearts of society reporters, but things
were not exactly as they seemed.
Cindi wanted so much to love Kent
completely, and she did love him, but not in the way he needed.
She
had kept a secret side of her life away from him.
She thought she could make the relationship work and she tried, but she
couldn't.
Without telling Kent the real reason, she gently broke their
enLraLyement.
They were still friends and he still loved her.
He
tried pleading and he even got angry at her, but nothing worked.
He
could not understand how she could just walk away from everything they
had planned.
He was desolate.
Kent went to Houston to stay with his uncle Frazier-to get away and to
find a job he could lose himself in.
As always, Kent assumed it was
some defect in him that had made still another romance crumble.
He was
in as vulnerable a state as he could possibly be, but he was trying to
put the torn seams of his life back together when he received two oddly
urgent messages.
One was a phone call from a female voice he couldn't
place and the other was a letter.
The message was the same: "Get back on the bus and get back to
Atlanta."
Kent did not know who initiated the call and letter, but when he
returned to Atlanta, he walked into an onslaught of crushing news.
His
sister Pat told him an ugly, unbelievabl'e story.
If Kent had harbored