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
wife what she wanted.
Pat had always dreamed of a house finer than any
house a Siler had yet known.
Hell, she still wanted her Tara.
She
always had and she always would, and if he ever hoped to get her out of
her mama's house, he was going to have to find a way to give her what
she demanded.
They went out driving in the country looking for likely properties.
Finally, they found some land for sale on Tell Road.
They could have missed the place so easily; it was west of East Point
in the Ben Hill district, beyond No Name Road, and deadended at the
Atlanta city limits.
It didn't look like city at all.
It was deep
country with thick trees up to the road and wetlands that some
homeowners had dammed up into algae-covered ponds.
The piece for sale
was way back in, past a log cabin-like place inhabited by a maiden lady
of indeterminate age named Fanny Kate Cash, who had lived there all of
her life.
It was ]Panny Kate who was selling off the back piece of
land.
There was no house, no road, nothing but trees.
But Pat wanted it.
Here they would build their mansion and create a wonderful riding ring
for horse shows.
She would give riding lessons to help meet their
bills.
She assured her husband that the spread at 4189 Tell Road
S.W.
would be known in horse i'l show circles all over the South.
Gil had to work three jobs to pay for it: his regular army assignments,
of course, and then as a caterer loading meals on airplanes and for the
J. C. Penney Company.
He had always had dark circles under his eyes,
but now they turned almost black.
Fearing the pace was going to
outright kill him, he tried to explain to Pat, "Honey, I can't make
it.
I'm only getting four hours to sleep at night."
She shook her head impatiently.
"Sure you can.
You just have to try
harder."
He did-and they bought the Tell Road property.
They cleared and graded
a spot for a riding ring and put up bleachers, bright lights, and
fences.
However, the mansion Pat visualized was far beyond their
means; that would have to wait.
In the meantime, they found two houses
that were being sold dirt cheap because they had to be moved.
One was
white and one was red brick, and they were eased precariously down Tell
Road on flatbed trucks, past Fanny Kate Cash's place and up to a knoll
back in the woods.
They soon learned that putting the two houses together would be far
more costly than to simply build a house on their land.
It didn't help
that Pat insisted on the very best in lighting fixtures, flooring, and
fancy trim.
When Pat wanted to pave the long gravel driveway, even
Boppo threw her hands up and said, "Good Lord!
Your mother's lost her
mind!
Does she have any idea what that would cost?"
The road stayed gravel, but Gil had masons lay a red brick foundation
under the white frame house and he built a long veranda that faced out
on the show ring.
They planted boxwood shrubs out in front and hung
black shutters like the ones found on the best homes in Atlanta.
It
wasn't enough.
When it was done, they could see that they didn't have
the mansion that Pat had pictured.
All they had was a mishmash that
just looked like two houses stuck together.
Worse, they had two
mortgages they couldn't keep up with and they were about to go bankrupt
and lose it all.
Pat went to her mother and stepfather in tears.
They had to help
her.
As usual, she blamed Gil for their troubles; he didn't know a damn
thing about building and she should have realized that, but it was too
late now.
She promised Boppo and Papa that she would take care of them
in their "golden years" if they would only help her save the Tell Road
place.
Of course, her parents said they would help her as they always had, and
the malignant money drain began.
In the end, it seemed the only way
Margureitte and the colonel could come up with enough money to bail Pat
and Gil out would be to sell their Dodson Drive house and move into the
Tell Road place with them.
It would be a profound loss for
Margureitte.
She didn't want to leave her elegant home to move into a
half-finished, jerry-built excuse for a house that was so far out in
the boondocks that it took almost an hour just to get to a grocery
store.
She didn't want to leave the lovely neighborhood just off
Headland Drive and have afternoon tea with Fanny K. Cash.
"I just want
to live in my own house," she wailed, "and have my grandchildren come
to see me like other grandmothers do.
I don't want to move."
But she finally acceded to Pat's pleas.
She wanted Pat to be happy.
How could she deny her daughter her dream?
"My mother always used guilt on my grandmother," Susan remembered.
"She would start an argument by saying, 'Mother, why did you go off and
leave me all alone with Mama Siler?
Who was my father?
Didn't you
love me?
Why did you leave me?"
And Boppo would say, 'I had no other
choice,'but it hurt Boppo.
I always remember my grandmother
saying-even when I was a grown-up: 'Why can't your mother be happy?"
The Dodson Drive house was snapped up as soon as the Radcliffes put it
on the market.
They wondered if they should have listed it at a higher
price.
Boppo and Papa moved out to Tell Road and into Ronnie's
bedroom, sharing the rest of the unfinished tacked-together house with
Pat, Gil, Susan, Debbie and Debbie's boyfriend, Gary Cole, and
Ronnie.
It was crowded and uncomfortable.
Once more Pat was living with her
parents, although she felt it was time for her daughters to grow up.
She could hardly wait for them to leave home.
Debbie competed in her last horse show in Hickory, North Carolina, in
the late summer of 1970.
She was fifteen years old and she was four
months pregnant.
"I won," she recalled, "and that was my last show."
She married Gary, a husky blond laborer who was just seventeen, and
they found a place of their own.
Susan was determined to graduate from high school; she would be the
first girl in her immediate family to do so.
The move to Teil Road
meant she had to go to summer school if she hoped to graduate early
from Headland High School.
Susan was shy, but she set certain
standards that no one could talk her out of.
She was not going to
marry anyone until she had a high school diploma, and she wasn't going
to be pregnant at her wedding.
Furthermore, she was truly going to
flout tradition by le until her e' hteenth birthday in March 1971.
staying sing ig Susan graduated from Headland in October of 1970 and
went to work at the PX at Fort Mac to help the family budget.
She
attended a dance at the fort one night in 1970 with her girlfriend,
Sonia Salo.
"I met this guy I thought was a maniac," she remembered,
smiling.
"He was good-looking all right, but he was dancing with
another girl, and he kept turning her around and winking at me and
making faces behind her back.
He was a show-off and a wild dancer
too.
I finally asked Sonja what on earth was wrong with him, and she laughed
and said, 'Oh, he's okay.
That's just Bill Alford.
He always acts
like that."
Alford, a first lieutenant, left a note on Susan's car a few days later
and they met at Sonja Salo's apartment, which was in the building where
he lived.
Reluctantly, Susan agreed to go out with him.
He was six
years older than she was, and he was far too much of an extrovert for
the shy, soft-spoken Susan.
Still, his exuberance was contagious, and
in spite of herself, she was soon utterly captivated by the brash young
lieutenant.
So was her mother.
Pat took one look at George L. "Bill" Alford and
decided he was perfect for Susan.
"My mother was the matchmaker,"
Susan recalled.
"She said if she was younger, she'd take him
herself.
I believe that-but I also think she was clearing the decks.
When we
came home from ourfit'st date, I was mortified to hear her ask Bill if
he'd given me an engagement ring!
She wanted us all out of the house
and on our own.
She had plans."
On November 6, 1970, Fort McPherson photographers took a picture of
Miss Susan Taylor and Colonel John H. Calloway, the base commander, as
they pinned the insignia of Bill Alford's new rank on his uniform.
He
was Captain Alford now.
Pat was pleased.
An army captain, still in his early twenties and already on his way up,
would make a fine husband for Susan.
They were married on March 27, 1971, in the Fort McPherson chapel, the
same chapel where Susan's mother and father had been married eighteen
and a half years earlier.
Pat had been pregnant with Susan then.
Susan and Bill had a beautiful wedding.
The groom and the father of
the bride were in full-dress uniform; Susan wore a white dress with a
long veil edged in lace, purchased at Rich's Department Store, and she
carried white roses and stephanotis clustered around a huge white
orchid.
Everyone smiled happily for the photographers with the
exception of Margureitte.
Her face was fixed in the familiar crystal
gaze of the Siler sisters.
Perhaps she knew what was about to
happen.
"My reception was a disaster," Susan recalled many years later.
"My