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
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We were on the back roads and the last thing I remember is going around
a curve and the steering wheel locking, and I couldn't do anything.
I
was going seventy-five miles an hour.
I remember waking up on top of
the hood on my back with my legs down over the steering wheel and my
seat belt was still hooked.
... My brother got thrown out of the car completely and his whole scalp
was pulled back from the glass.
He was in the front seat and he went
out, Dawn went under the dashboard, and my husband went from the
backseat into the dashboard.
. . . Finally someone saw my brother
walking around in a daze, but we were out there for six hours before
they found us.
They took us to two different hospitals.
. . . I broke
my back, and Gary broke his neck.
Dawn had a skull fracture.
I was in
the hospital in Florence for four weeks, and in another hospital at
home for three months after I had surgery to fuse my back in five
places.
They put in a metal rod.
I had three operations."
Susan and Bill were the first ones home from the reunion, and they
walked into their apartment to a ringing phone.
"I had to tell my
mother about the accident," Susan recalled.
"I told her that Debbie's
back was probably broken, and she snapped at me, 'I don't care about
Debbie!
I want to know about Ronnie........
That's the way she was.
Each of the three of us was indispensable to
her, but she took turns.
At the time of the accident, Debbie didn't
matter, but Ronnie did.
I have no idea why."
No one was ever really sure who had been driving.
Some family members
thought that Ronnie was, and that Debbie had lied to protect him.
They
were all lucky to survive the grinding crash.
After that, Pat's luck seemed to change.
Through her contacts in the
riding world, she met the man she had been looking for in the fall of
1972: the perfect lover.
Her choice might not have been every young
woman's dream; he was as old as Papa-but not nearly as handsome-and he
had gray hair, a florid complexion, and a chunky midsection.
Put him
up next to any one of the men in the horse show crowd and he would come
out a distant second as far as looks went.
But he had it in his power
to give Pat everything she craved.
Hap Brown* was a member of Governor Jimmy Carter's cabinet, the head of
one of the most important departments in the state of Georgia.
His
name was always in the paper, he sat at the governor's right hand, and
he kept a fine house back in his hometown as well as lavish lodgings in
Atlanta.
When Hap Brown walked into the Capitol building with its gold
leaf-covered dome, people lined up to talk to him and shake his hand.
He was known all over Atlanta-all over the state of Georgia, for that
matter.
When fifty-eight-year-old Hap Brown's eye fell on thirty-fiveyear-old
Pat Taylor, he was instantly captivated.
She was lush and beautiful,
but she moved with a certain class too.
Her voice was a soft drawl, a
young girl's sweet voice.
When she spoke to him, she looked directly
at him with her crystalline green eyes, and then, seeming suddenly
embarrassed, she looked down.
He liked her directness, and he liked
her shyness.
And she obviously liked him.
He sensed he could possess her if he
chose.
Hap knew he would have to be discreet-more than discreet.
He
was not only a member of Jimmy Carter's top staff, he was a married
man, and Jimmy Carter, his boss, was not the kind of governor who would
tolerate a member of his cabinet fooling around.
Even more critical,
the money in the Brown family came from Mrs. Brown's side.
Hap had
his salary and benefits, but Cordella* controlled their true wealth.
She would certainly look upon any intimate arrangement with Pat Taylor
with far more disfavor than even Governor Carter.
Hap Brown could not help himself.
He was soon completely smitten with
Pat.
She made him feel like a man twenty years younger.
She was the
most romantic woman he had ever met, and, at the same time, the most
sensuous.
She wrote him poems that were tender and symbolic, and then
made love to him like a brazen trollop.
Like all those who loved Pat, he was concerned about her well-being.
She seemed too delicate and too refined to have to go to work each day,
but she needed to work, so Hap created a little public relations job
for her.
She missed a lot of work.
She was often ill, sometimes
hospitalized, and he visited his pale, wan mistress, held her hand, and
promised her that he would take care of her, although she must
understand that their affair would be very, very private.
She always agreed and Hap felt safe, pleased that he had found himself
a woman both sultry and sensible.
Hap's government position meant they
could be together almost all the time.
He had meetings to go to,
political functions, reasons that he couldn't get home in the evenings
or on weekends.
He and Pat dined out often.
His wife was a comforting
hour's commute away from Atlanta and it was highly unlikely that they
would run into her or any hometown friends.
Since Pat had no office skills and precious little formal education,
there wasn't much that she could do for the Department of Energy, but
there was a lot she could do for the department head.
She and Hap took
long lunches and whole days off together, driving around the
countryside, watching the verdant vegetation of summer change to gold
and orange in autumn.
Hap sent Pat flowers-roses.
She adored roses.
He bought her a gold
cameo pendant and she began to collect cameos.
She treasured each of
his gifts.
"She told me they would go out to the country and have a
picnic by a stream," Susan remembered.
"He'd put his head in her lap while she read Victorian poems to him.
I
think she really loved Hap, and she used to tell me that he was going
to 'come for her' one day, and she'd be waiting for him.
It was as if
she expected him to come riding up and sweep her into his arms."
Pat seemed to be truly devoted to Hap Brown.
If he was not exactly a
knight in shining armor riding to her rescue, maybe she saw him as a
father figure who would care for her always.
She wanted so much to be
the one and only woman in Hap Brown's life.
And sometimes, she seemed to be.
Hap looked at her with eyes poleaxed
by love.
Although he insisted on discretion, she suspected a lot of
people knew about them.
She saw the lifted eyebrows in the office when
she slipped away to meet him.
She didn't care.
The sooner his wife
faced the truth the better.
Then Hap would be free to come for her.
Hap Brown quickly realized he would get only the frostiest welcome at
the house on Tell Road.
Margureitte was outspoken in her disapproval
of the relationship.
The Radcliffes were too proper to confront him
directly, and if they had, Pat would have thrown the tantrum to end all
tantrums.
But the message was there: We do not approve.
Pat took instead to entertaining her married lover at Susan and Bill's
apartment.
She had used the apartment before to meet other married
men, but she prevailed upon Susan to serve drinks and appetizers and to
"be nice to Hap."
Susan saw that Hap was "courting" her mother in the
old-fashioned sense of the word.
He was gallant and kind and
generous.
But he was still married, and he seemed in no hurry to change that
arrangement.
Pat made no secret of her intentions.
Susan remembered her mother
pleading, "Take me home, Hap.
Take me home to North Carolina."
"She wanted to go back with the aunts and back where Grandma Siler
was," Susan sighed.
"Hap couldn't just leave and take her there, and
they'd fight and she'd cry."
Pat enlisted Susan's aid in her campaign to capture Hap, suggesting
that she call Hap "Dad."
Susan balked at that, and Pat countered,
"Well, at least you could say, 'When are you going to marry my mom and
be our father?"
" Susan already had a father, but she finally got up the nerve to blurt
out, "I hear you-all are getting married?"
Hap froze as he reached for an appetizer, drew back his hand, and
stared at the floor.
He was clearly embarrassed, and for once the
voluble politician could find no words.
The minutes that followed were
awkward.
Pat looked away and bit her lip, disappointed and
frustrated.
Susan was mortified.
She could see that Hap Brown had no
intention-ever-of marrying her mother.
For all the power Hap had, he was alarmed by Pat's growing
possessiveness.
He tried to deflect her single-minded thrust toward
his divorce and remarriage to her.
He put himself out time and again
for her and her family.
He did his best to help Bill Alford stay in
the army when a sweeping reduction in forces hit Fort McPherson.
But
Bill wasn't regular army, and even Hap's senator friends couldn't buck
the trend.
Bill left the service in August of 1973 and went to college
while Susan managed Colonel Alan's horse farm in Riverdale-the same
Colonel Alan who had once posed so proudly for an article about his
daughter's engagement to Susan's uncle, Kent Radcliffe.
Over Margureitte's objections, Hap took Pat along on a business trip to