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
were far from peaceful.
It shouldn't have been that way.
Not from the
way Boppo remembered her life.
"I'm happiest when nd," she said.
"I
took the ones that there are children arou needed me most, and I helped
them.
I loved them all the same, he one who needs me most.
No matter
of course.
I just do for t Is there for them."
what happenst they
know their Boppo s the one who needed her And, as it happened, Pat was
alway most.
Pat and Debbie grew even closer.
With Susan and Bill's "silly moves
all over the country," Pat could count on Debbie staying close to
her.
Gary Cole, Debbie's long-suffering husband, came home one night to find
that his wife, daughter, and furniture were gone.
Pat had helped
Debbie move into an apartment, encouraging her to take everything she
needed.
At Thanksgiving, 1984, Boppo, Papa, and Pat drove north to Marion,
Indiana, to have the holiday meal with Bill and Susan.
Susan was delighted to see that everything seemed to be fine with her
mother.
But several weeks later, Pat drove up alone.
Somewhere in Kentucky she had one of her "sudden attacks," and after
several anxious hours Susan learned she had been hospitalized.
A day
later, Pat came driving up to the Alfords' as if nothing had
happened.
Susan felt a familiar chill, but she fought it back.
She wanted to
believe in her mother-probably more than anyone else in Pat's family
did-but she had to work hard not to see small, disturbing
aberrations.
Pat seemed obsessed with retrieving all the things Boppo had given
Susan over the years.
She said that she would replace everything with
new merchandise that didn't have so much sentimental value.
Still,
they had a good visit, and Susan enjoyed having her mother there.
She
had been seeing shadows, she decided, where there were none.
In March of 198S, Pat returned for a long visit.
Susan's friends found
her charming.
"They loved Mom," Susan said.
"But when they were gone,
she told me she hated them-they took up too much of my time.
She
wanted me to stay in the house with her all the time."
Pat again insisted on checking through Susan's cupboards, drawers, and
storage areas, even through Bill's office, looking for Boppo's gifts.
"I'm just straightening up," she explained when Susan asked her what
she was doing.
"You don't want this candelabra-or this silver
service.
Now that I'm out, you can give this all back to Boppo."
Susan let her have what she wanted, and Pat did replace a few of the
things she carried away, but they came from discount stores, the heavy
sterling pieces supplanted by flimsy silverplated things, nothing like
the items she took away.
Later, when Susan and Pat in Florence,
Alabama, 1986.
Susan had her mother back at last, and they were closer
now than they had ever been.
Assuming the duties of a nurse, Pat took care of one of the "righteous
sisters," Aunt Liz (left), who barely recovered from her near-fatal
illness.
On the right is Aunt Thelma.
The valuable pearl necklace and bracelet and an antique cookbook that
Pat had given away as gifts would return to haunt her.
Mug shots of Pat Taylor after her second arrest in April 1991.
"I
can't understand why anyone in this whole wide world would think Pat
got whatever she wanted," her mother said in dismay.
"She never got
anithing she wanted.
Her whole life has been tragic.
Why can't people
understand that?"
4
i -A Susan and Bill packed to move again, this time to Florence,
Alabama, Susan realized how many things were missing from her house.
Visiting in McDonough, she saw most of her stuff in her mother's
room.
She was perplexed, but not really angry.
It was all in the family.
Pat and Debbie branched out to private-duty nursing in the homes and
condominiums of elderly patients.
Susan was immensely grateful that
her mother was working and liked her new career.
She was in such demand; Pat and Debbie had only a ortunately, Pat's
jobs had week or so off in between patients.
Unf a built-in
obsolescence.
The age and degree of infirmity of her employers made it
inevitable that they didn't live long.
Both Pat and Debbie took care
of Mrs. Mansfield, an elderly woman who lived in a luxurious apartment
in a retirement condo in one of Atlanta's finest neighborhoods.
Debbie
was with Mrs. Mansfield when she died and cried inconsolably.
Pat
took it philosophlcally.
"Debbie really loved Mrs. Mansfield," Susan recalled.
"Debbie had a
real tender side."
Bill Alford's career involved troubleshooting companies
with poor performance records, mostly in the office supply area.
It
meant moving frequently, but he was good, and he rose steadily in his
field.
He was happy to be away from c Siler-Taylor-Radcliffe und Drang
of th i Atlanta and the Sturm sited, Susan was always shushing him
family crises.
When they vi and whispering, "Be nice to them, Bill!"
It did little good, but his sarcasm was so subtle that
it often went over her family's heads.
loved to Florence, AlaPat was a frequent visitor when they m The Alfords
had a wonderful bama, in the summer of 198S.
le, using a house, and Susan decorated it in a homey country sty number
of antiques.
Pat enjoyed being there, playing with Sean and Courtney,
and having Susan wait on her.
The Florence house had a pool and Pat
liked to sit beside it on a chaise lounge.
She wouldn't wear a bathing
suit-despite her initial weight loss at the halfway house, she had
since regained it all and considerably more-but she sometimes jumped
'In wearing her shorts and blouse.
It was in Florence the next spring that Susan discovered she was
pregnant for the third time.
She was thirty-three, and they hadn't
planned on more children, but she and Bill were happy.
Her mother was
not.
"You're too old to have another baby," Pat said firmly."
I think
the only thing is for you to get rid of it."
"It will weaken you, I'll tell you that.
You'll never be healthy
again.
What about Sean and Courtney?
If you die, they'll have no
mother.
You'll cheat them."
One of the main drawbacks of having yet another grandchild, Pat
insisted, was that she was already sewing and embroidering full-time
for the family she had; she could never, ever keep up with a fifth
grandchild.
Susan thought her overblown view of the importance of her
sewing projects was almost pathetic.
Admittedly, for this family,
conception at thirty-three meant an over-the-hill pregnancy, but Pat's
arguments verged on hysteria.
She had been a grandmother at that age, although she had always refused
to be called "Grandma," and only recently had begun answering to
"Grandma Pat."
Despite her mother's dire warnings, Susan carried and gave birth to her
second son, Adam, on January 5, 1987.
Through complications that had
nothing to do with her "advanced age," Adam was delivered by cesarean
section.
At Susan's request, Pat had been barred from the labor room,
but she talked her way into the recovery room by explaining to the
doctor that she was a registered nurse.
Susan didn't want her there.
"I can't say why-maybe it was because she
wanted me to abort my baby-but it was like the time I was little in the
Philippines and my hand was crushed.
I didn't want to see my mother
then, and I didn't want to see her after Adam was born.
I just turned
my face to the wall.
The obstetrician and pediatrician were personal
friends of Bill's and mine.
They told Mom that I was the new mother
and they made a policy of letting the mothers have what they wanted."
Perhaps Pat had been truly worried about Susan's health.
She made such
a fuss over Adam that no one would ever have guessed how hard she had
fought to have Susan abort him.
She cooed over the new baby boy as if
she had never had a grandchild before.
Pat was between jobs right after Adam was born and she spent a lot of
time in Florence, driving the five hours between Georgia and Alabama by
herself.
She seemed completely devoted to her newest grandchild.
He
was a big strapping baby boy, and Susan dressed him in the lacy
Victorian gowns and little bonnets her mother made for him only long
enough to take pictures-just to keep peace.
Pat loved to see him
dressed up, but Sean was indignant, and as soon as the photo sessions
were over he would put a baseball cap and a sports sweatshirt on his
baby brother.
In June of 1987, Susan took her children and drove to McDonough for a
visit with Boppo, Papa, and her mother.
She had meant to stay only a
week, but she got sick.
"It was the strangest I illness I'd ever had,"
she recalled later."
wanted to head home because something in July,
but I had to stay an extra few days d wanting us to come with me.
Bill
kept calling me an was wrong home, and I told him, "I can't drive.
My
feet won't work right."
usan remembered, wincing.
"And I "They ached
terribly," S actually had trouble pushing down on the accelerator and
One morning I decided I could make it.
I had to try to brake.
get home.
Sean had his learner's permit, and I thought I could drive