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
even the slightest hope that he and Cindi would get back together, she
smashed it.
"Your girlfriend prefers women," she said flatly.
"I
don't know why she ever got engaged to you-maybe to cover up her real
life.
She's a lesbian.
It was true, but Cindi had never wanted Kent to know.
This was 1965,
and she loved him enough to let him go with less devastating truths.
Reeling from that disclosure, Kent was in despair.
And yet within a
short time Pat chose to hit him with an even more stunning
revelation.
Kent had always believed that he was the natural son of Clifford
Radcliffe, and no one had even hinted otherwise.
Although Kent had yet
to prove himself to the man he admired so much, he was proud to be his
son.
But, of course, he was not.
According to his birth certificate,
he had been born out of wedlock long before Margureitte ever met
Radcliffe.
Again it was his sister who lacerated him with the truth.
In a moment
of rage, Pat turned her fury on her brother and spat out, "You're not
our kind, you know.
You don't even know who you are!
You think Papa's your father but he isn't.
You're a bastard, and
you're so stupid you don't even know it!"
It was such a cruel thing for her to do.
The little boy who had
endured deafness, the teenager who had survived a broken heart, the man
who saw one marriage and his hopes for another fail, had everything he
believed in taken away from him in those appalling sentences.
Pat could hardly have believed that she was Clifford Radcliffe's true
issue.
She was older than Kent; in all likelihood, she and Kent had
both been fathered by the same man.
However, she clearly saw herself
as superior to Kent; in her mind, she was aristocracy and he was an
interloper from a lower stratum of society.
Once she had opened the
Pandora's box of Kent's genetic heritage, she reminded him of his true
roots every chance she got.
There were witnesses who heard her do it.
Kent was never the same.
He dated again, but his heart wasn't in it.
He drank too much and his abilty to deal with loss was almost gone.
Cindi wept for his pain, but she couldn't be what he needed.
Christmas of 1965 was tense, no matter how hard Boppo tried to make it
festive.
Kent was so depressed.
He had been to Alabama to see Cindi,
and even she found him so changed, so bitter.
Gil was often overseas.
He had become a shadow husband and shadow
father.
The tight little family group on Dodson Drive didn't need him;
he was as alienated as Kent was.
Kent was living on Dodson Drive, but only temporarily; he was trying to
get into an apartment of his own.
Pat's kids wanted him around, but
his sister railed at him constantly.
Boppo was torn between the two of
them, but as always she sided with her daughter, guessing that Kent was
stronger than Pat.
Kent was dating a flight attendant in College Park, Georgia, in the
latter part of 1965.
She was beautiful and she really cared for him,
but Kent could no longer risk trusting any woman enough to fall in
love.
When the girl became pregnant, she kept the news to herself,
sensing that the timing wasn't right and that Kent's feelings for her
weren't strong enough.
She bided her time, waiting for the right
moment to tell him.
It never came.
On February 1, 1966, Officer M. C. Faulkner of the East Point Police
Department received a Signal 59 directing him to 2555
Stewart Avenue, "just in front of Nalley's Chevrolet."
A Signal 59
meant a dead body.
He expected to see an accident.
And, indeed, there
was a minor traffic accident on Stewart Avenue.
An Oldsmobile sedan
parked at the curb had a smashed right front fender and the tire on
that side was flat.
Nearby, Faulkner saw a station wagon with the
tailgate dented.
Officer G. H. Wade told Faulkner that he had been called to the scene
by a salesman at Nalley's.
In response to their questions, Mary
Schroder said she had been driving her 1962 Ford station wagon south on
Stewart Avenue with her attorney husband, James, as a passenger.
"I
was making a right turn into Nalley's when my car was struck in the
rear by that Oldsmobile.
I think it's a '62 too.
The car then passed
our car and pulled to the curb."
James Schroder picked up the strange account.
"The driver looked back
at us as he passed.
I got out and started to walk over to his car and
then I saw him slump over in the seat."
A Nalley's salesman said he had heard a loud report-"like a
gunshot"-just before the accident, but another witness told the
officers that the Oldsmobile had passed his car just before the crash
and that the driver, a young man, had been smoking a cigarette.
Just when the gunshot had occurred was a moot point.
The driver of the
Oldsmobile was dead, his body stretched out across the front seat with
his head resting near the right front door.
His feet, clad in Hush Puppy shoes, still rested next to the
accelerator and brake.
There was no blood apparent; he might have only
fallen asleep.
But a .22-caliber pump-action, single-shot rifle lay on
the floor on the passenger side on a pile of crushed newspapers.
The
recoil had left it pointed at the dead man's knee, but its single shot
had done its work.
On the slight chance that the young man might be alive, he was rushed
to Grady Memorial Hospital, but he was dead on arrival.
A driver's license and Social Security card in a wallet found on the
dead man identified him as Reginald Kent Radcliffe, twenty-six, of
2378
Dodson Drive.
Sergeant Haines of the Fulton County Medical Examiner's Office arrived
to take charge of the body.
The ME's office classited Kent's death as
"violent" and as a suicide.
He had suffered a "pressed contact gunshot
wound to the mid-chest through the clothing."
He would have died
almost instantly.
A blood alcohol test revealed that the percentage of
ethyl alcohol in Kent's system was .13.
In most states, .10 is the
standard for legal intoxication.
Investigators removed Kent's belongings from his impounded car.
His
wallet held $2.40.
There was an athletic bag, a cigarette lighter,
cigarettes, two ballpoint pens, a second leveraction .22 rifle, his
glasses (in the backseat), and, also in the rear seat, a partially
empty pint bottle of rum.
There was no sophisticated forensic science test that could determine
just when Kent had fired a bullet into his heart.
Was he dead, or even
dying, when he hit the rear of the Schroders' car with his right front
fender?
Probably not; James Schroder was sure the driver had glanced
back at them after the collision.
Had Kent intended to kill himself sometime that first day of
February?
Had he driven around East Point with the gun poised and ready?
Or had
the traffic accident been only the final straw to a man who believed
that his life was without joy?
Had he grabbed the gun and fired in a
fatally impulsive gesture?
The East Point investigators even considered the possibility that there
might have been another passenger, that Kent might have been
murdered.
His glasses were unbroken in the backseat.
He was so nearsighted that
he could not have seen to drive without them.
No, it was more likely that the force of the blast knocked them from
his face and over the seat.
They dismissed the murder theory.
Too
many people had observed Kent's car after the accident, and no one had
emerged and run away.
Kent had destroyed himself.
It was early evening when the notifying officer knocked on the front
door at Dodson Drive.
Margureitte answered, feeling a premonition; no
one but strangers ever came to the front door.
When she saw the uniform and before the officer spoke a word, she cried
out, "My God!
Kent's killed himself!"
Pat stood down the hall, watching.
She tried to hug her mother, but
Margureitte pushed her away, inconsolable.
Colonel Radcliffe went to
the morgue to make the formal identification.
Kent's death made no headlines; there was only a short article on the
back pages of the Atlanta Yournal.
His obituary was even shorter.
No
mention was made of the manner of his death.
Survivors were listed as his parents, Colonel and Mrs.
Clifford B.
Radcliffe, East Point, and a sister, Mrs.
G. H. Taylor, East Point.
On Thursday, February 3, 1966, services were held in Hemperley's
Funeral Parlor and Kent was buried in Onslow Memorial Park in
Jacksonville, North Carolina.
Cindi Alan iklipped a ring on his finger
before his casket was closed.
It was engraved, "To Kent from
Jessica."
But there would never be a Jessica.
Nor would there be another baby,
one that Kent had not known about.
The flight attendant who had been
carrying his child had an abortion.
She grieved terribly, but not for
very long.
Six months later she was a passenger in a two-seater
private plane.
It crashed, killing her and the pilot on impact.
Pat was an only child now.
Kent was gone forever.
The only obvious