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
Papa and Boppo were with her that night and tried to stop the storm
they knew was coming.
Pat was seething and hysterical.
She demanded
to see the chief of J'all operations.
Tom watched helplessly.
The more she rocked the boat in the Fulton
County jail, the more likely he was to be shipped off to prison.
But Pat was completely out of control.
With all the histrionics going
on in their house, the strain on his wife, the physical confrontations,
Colonel Radcliffe temporarily lost his usual detached air and his
self-control.
Somebody had to shut Pat up.
When she continued to rage
as they walked down the long passageway from the visitors' area, he
suddenly flung his hand back and caught her full in the face, smacking
her in the eye.
Pat was struck dumb, and then she started to sob.
All the way home,
she threatened to move out and go over to Paw and Nona's and take
Ronnie with her.
When Tom called, she sobbed to him about being
struck.
"He hit me full force before we even got out of the jail," she
complained.
"Walking down the hallway.
He said I was terrible to you and about everything I did to you, and
everything was my fault.
I just finally went into tears and said, 'Get
off my back."
He said he was going to have me committed to
Metropolitan.
I told him it would be over my dead body.
"I didn't mean for all that to happen, Sugar."
I worked so hard to get pretty and everything for you."
"Please forgive me, Shug.
First things first, remember."
She sobbed into the phone, but she smiled as she hung up, a smile that
Tom, of course, could not see.
. . .
Pat almost convinced Tom that he should fire Ed Garland.
Garland was rarely available to her when she called, would not listen
to her suggestions, and she detested him.
She phoned another attorney
and asked to make an appointment with him.
She explained that Tom was
still represented by Garland, but she saw no reason why she couldn't
hire the second attorney to be her adviser.
"My father-who used to be
with counter intelligence-told me that."
The attorney said he could represent Tom after he dismissed Garland,
but he explained that he could not ethically sue Ed Garland to get back
fifteen thousand dollars Pat said she had coming.
He also suggested
that Tom's college degree and skill at blacksmithing would make him a
natural to teach in prison as part of the new Georgia Youthful
Offenders Program.
That way, Tom could be outside more, pending any
appeal.
It would be far easier on him than being locked up in the
crowded Fulton County jail.
"That would be up at Buford Prison," he added.
"It's an accredited
high school.
He could teach, and it'would be better for him.
It's
only thirty minutes away."
"My physical condition is quite critical, and while he's in Fulton
County jail I can see him once a week and talk on the phone four times
a week," Pat said, quashing the suggestion at once.
The attorney explained that Tom could have almost unlimited visits and
phone calls in Buford.
@4 His big thing is contact with me," she countered.
"If he has to go
to Jackson [prison] first, he'd be down there for six weeks and he
couldn't see me.
. . . I could go at any minute."
With a start, the attorney realized this woman was saying she might die
at any minute.
She sounded healthy enough on the phone.
It scarcely seemed possible.
Pat never told Tom that he had a choice to go directly to a teaching
job at Buford; she simply explained firmly to the attorney who
suggested it that Tom would always choose to be near herno matter what
conditions he himself was in.
Nor would she tell that attorney
specifically who her doctors were.
She had many.
She had "specialists."
The climate at the Tell Road farm was not good.
The one thing that
Clifford Radcliffe would not allow was for anyone to criticize his
wife."
Reit, " as he called her, was the most beautiful woman, the
kindest, the most well bred, and his sweetheart.
Usually he went along
with anything she wanted, and protecting her daughter at all costs was
the most important thing she wanted.
But Pat's outbursts were wearing
her mother down.
Pat had chased after both Boppo and Papa with a knife and an umbrella
when she didn't get her way.
Her behavior at the jail had been
inexcusable.
The colonel had to make a trip out of state.
It was an unfortunate
time for him to be gone.
Pat continued to insist that she was moving
out and going to Nona and Paw's.
Boppo pleaded with her to be
reasonable.
On April 10, Pat disappeared into her room and slammed the
door, and the trouble-at least for that night-seemed to be over.
But then Pat emerged, wearing a diaphanous red nightgown held up with
spaghetti straps.
She was barefoot, And there were thin crimson
stripes of blood welling up on each wrist.
Before Boppo could stop
her, and despite her crutches, Pat ran from the house and disappeared
into the piney woods and quarry area behind.
It was April, but it was
a nasty evening, full of sleety rain.
There was a power company
right-of-way back behind the trees, a wide clear swath where the towers
that carried the lines pierced the dusk.
Pat half-ran, half-hopped, a
blur of red in the fading ugh t, over the stubble-cut grass, too fast
for her mother who ran behind her, begging her to stop.
Boppo phoned for help and rounded up a number of neighbor men.
They
hurried to their cars and headed up Tell Road.
The only place for Pat
to go was along the power lines; a mile or so further on she would come
out to railroad tracks and a veterinar.
p ian s clinic.
The Radcliffes knew the vet well-he had taken care of
their horses-but nobody would be there at that time.
After hollering back and forth in the lowering twilight, they finally
found Pat, still running and hobbling, her hair streaming behind her
and her wrists dripping blood.
She had worked herself into an
ultimately hysterical state.
Still dressed in her nightgown, Pat was admitted on a court order to
the Metropolitan Psychiatric Center in Atlanta for evalnation of her
dangerousness to herself.
Pat wouldn't be staying in a "psycho ward"
in some city hospital; Metropolitan was decorated like a fine hotel,
and it was very, very expensive.
When she was admitted, she had superficial slash marks on her wrists,
and she appeared anxious, agitated, and extremely talkative.
She complained that she could not see out of her left eye because her
father had struck her.
The clinic physician was more aghast at the
festering abscess on her right buttock.
Pat was disheveled and talked a mile a minute, but her response to what
was happening around her was flat.
She gave the admitting physician a
long history of her'life.
By her own reckoning, she had always been
the victim, assailed by bad luck and other people's insensitivity.
Her
husband was in jail, she said, convicted of two murders he had not
committed.
They had only been married eleven months, and right after
the wedding, she recalled, she had been in a terrible automobile
accident.
"I've paid my lawyers forty-five thousand dollars and given
them property worth thirty-five thousand more to appeal my husband's
case to the highest courts," she declared.
Margureitte told the doctor that Pat hadn't been taking care of
herself; she was obsessed with getting her husband out of jail.
"She's been talking a lot, and she's just had a lot of negative
thoughts.
Pat insisted on calling her daughters.
"They're trying to kill me!"
she told Susan breathlessly.
"I was raped when I was only a child,"
she whispered into the phone, and told Susan she would kill her if she
didn't come down and get her out of the hospital.
Doctors listening in
noted that she was grossly distorting the severity of her injuries to
them.
Asked about the abscess on her buttock, Pat said that it and the sores
on her thigh had been caused by penicillin shots she had received from
her regular doctor, Dr. Taylor.
A check with Taylor's office revealed
that Pat had received no penicillin shots, but she had been under
treatment for the mysterious sores.
She complained of terrible pain and was given injections of Demerol.
Pat was admitted with a tentative diagnosis of "Agitated depression
with possible thought disorder."
It was a catchall diagnosis, not to
be found in the DSM-II, the Diagnostic and Statistic Manual of Mental
Disorders, the bible of the psychiatric world.
Two psychiatrists did
concur that she was "not able to take care of herself at this time."
A physical examination revealed that "the patient is afebrile (has no
fever] with no acute infections present.
Chronic subcutaneous and
muscular cold abscess formations under treatment with incision and
drainage, and antibiotic coverage is also noted.
. .
. There was no evidence of thrombophlebitis .
. . there was no
evidence of pathological process involving the left eye."
Papa's thrown-back hand had done no real damage to Pat's eye; she could
see out of it perfectly well, and even though Pat had convinced Tom
that she had only a few years-perhaps months-to live, a complete