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
on the expressway by setting cruise control once I got up to speed.
My
mother wouldn't hear of it - She told me, 'You can't eak."When she saw
was make it, Susie.
You're sick.
You're w p her hands and said, 'All right!
If you going
to go, she threw u ways said that.
She'd said want to kill yourself,
go ahead."
She al going ahead with my pregnancy with that when I told
her I was Adam."
Susan and the kids headed for Alabama, and they did all right sway.
The speed limit was sixty-five until she got on the expres miles per
our, and Susan had great difficulty getting past thirty-five.
Her foot
wouldn't press hard enough on the accelerator.
She tried to force her
foot down on the pedal.
"I finally S had to reach down and just take
my hand and mash my foot on the accelerator.
I thought we'd never get
home."
Susan's hands ached too.
For some time after she got home she had to
hold her hands together and squeeze them, rub her legs, and massage her
feet to get some relief.
It was the worst, ver had.
Her skin turned
gray and her bone-aching flu she had e r like two dead things.
eyes stared back at her from the mirro Time after time she told Bill,
"I just can't stand the pain in my feet.
I can hardly walk."
Susan's doctor tried one antibiotic after another, but she got worse.
Finally, he said she was probably overmedicated.
"I'm just taking you
off antibiotics entirely.
You've just got a really bad case of the
flu."
"But I had no energy," Susan recalled.
"I could hardly even get to the
doctor's office.
Bill was so worried.
He said, 'I've got to get you
well, 'cause you've got a six-month-old and two kids at home."
Finally, I gradually began to get better."
It took Susan about six weeks to get back on her feet.
Adam worried the Alfords too.
At two weeks, he had had unexplained
bleeding from the lower intestinal tract.
They were frightened that it
might be something really serious.
The doctors tested him for
everything under the sun and finally put him on a special formula.
That seemed to work, but he couldn't digest solid food until he was
almost a year old.
Since Debbie had also had bouts with bloody
colitis, the doctors suggested that Susan and Bill check their
families' medical histories to see if there were any other relatives
who had suffered from rectal bleeding.
"In 1987," Susan recalled, "I had two projects.
The first was to o
back through all our ancestors to see if any of them had ever had
anything like Adam did; the second was to write a book.
I wanted to write a really upbeat, inspirational book about my mother
and the family.
She had been through so much, and then all those years
in prison, and she had a good job, helping people, and she'd even
helped people in prison with the classes she taught.
The rest of us had suffered too; we were still emotionally exhausted
from those bad years.
I wanted to write a happy-ending kind of book
about a family that had triumphed over one member's mental illness and
drug addiction.
My family wasn't perfectnobody's is-and Lord knows we
certainly had our eccentricities, but I thought we had come through it
all just fine.
"I repressed my fears; I still ignored the warnings.
I just wanted so
much for us all to be all right."
Pat Taylor hit a bad patch .
in 1987.
After Mrs. Mansfield died, she
couldn't find another "sitting" job.
If she wanted to, Debbie .
. .
could always work as a receptionist In a doctor's office; she was young
and attractive with a terrific figure. It wasn't nearly so easy for
Pat.
She had only a tenth-grade education and she was fifty.
She had
put on so much weight that she looked her age and more.
Almost
overnight, she had gone from a slender, almost ethereal woman of a
certain age to a stolid, solid middleaged woman.
She still loved
exquisite period dresses with lace and hand stitching, and she had a
beautiful wedding gown, circa 1880, on a mannequin in her bedroom in
Papa and Boppo's house, a white ghost figure standing in a dark
corner.
The antique dress was about a size 8, and Pat wore a 22.
She reveled
in her costumes, but she could no longer squeeze into them.
If she
dreamed of romance and perfect love, she no longer spoke of it.
Way back in the days when Pat and her children, Susan, Debbie, and
Ronnie were living with Boppo and Papa, Pat had often accused her
parents of resenting the money they spent on her and her children.
"If
we're too much for you to support," she would cry, "I'll just go work
in a Waffle House!"
It was only an idle threat.
Then.
For Pat, a job
at the Waffle House was the most desperate strait in which an
upperclass woman could find herself.
Twenty years later in 1987, she
was forced to take a job as an assistant manager at a Pizza Hut up I-7S
in Stockbridge.
She told her children that she would earn close to
twenty thousand dollars a year, if you included benefits.
How she hated it.
If anything, it was far worse than a Waffle House.
The steel bowls of pizza dough were heavy and hurt her back.
The smell
of tomato sauce and oregano clung to her auburn hair and seeped into
her very skin.
She couldn't get along with the younger managers and
the other workers.
Life didn't seem fair to Pat.
Susan had a fine house and a good
husband, Debbie was tanned and wild and sexy as Pat had once been, and
Boppo had a man who loved her beyond reason.
But Pat?
Pat had nothing.
She had no love, no future, no money, and she had
lost the only home she ever wanted.
She had become fascinated with
antique dolls and wanted to collect them.
And then she wanted to own
real antique carousel horses.
She wanted to be a true southern lady.
There were so many things she wanted.
Somehow, there had to be a way
to get them.
"Pat didn't want to go to work for the Crists, you know," Margureitte
Radcliffe recalled.
"I believe it was their son who called her-because
she had such wonderful references from her looking after other elderly
people-and he just pleaded with her, begged her, to take care of his
parents.
A very fine old family.
Very, very wealthy."
Pat resigned from the Pizza Hut, glad to be rid of the smell of tomato
sauce and oregano (despite what her mother later said), and went to
work for Elizabeth and James Crist.
The Crists had lived for decades in a mansion on a huge, rambling
spread of manicured grounds on Nancy Creek Road near Atlanta's
Peachtree Country Club.
Once, a long time ago, Pat Taylor had designed the kind of estate she
wanted, but all her efforts to make it come to life had fallen short.
Her dream plantation was very like the Crists' estate.
Their home was
built of pale green wood siding, three stories high, with wings,
dormers, bay windows, a "Florida room.
" The main house had maids' quarters and an attached garage with room
for four cars, and the grounds featured a pond, a pool, a barbecue
area, and every other possible nicety for gracious living.
The mansion
was set at least five hundred feet back from Nancy Creek I Road.
A
circular driveway led through the pine trees, oak trees, holly bushes,
and huge rhododendrons that sheltered the vast green stretch of lawn.
The view from the rear of the house was into private woods.
The Crists
were, indeed, "very, very wealthy."
In the spring of 1987 the Crists found they needed assistance.
James
Crist suffered from Parkinson's disease.
Betty Crist called a friend
of hers who worked at the Peachtree Plaza and asked if she had any
suggestions.
"Yes," the woman answered.
"There's a woman named
Patricia Taylor who's supposed to be awfully good."
Armed with Pat
Taylor's phone number at the Radcliffes', Betty Crist called her and
arranged an interview.
The buxom applicant seemed competent and
intelligent.
She had a certain air of quiet good breeding about her,
and seemed unimpressed by the plush surroundings of the Crists' home.
Pat Taylor was hired.
She would receive, as a beginning salary, ten
dollars an hour and meals.
She began working for the Crists on May 1,
1987.
Debbie soon joined her, working the night shift.
The Crists had two sons and a daughter and they agreed that Pat Taylor
seemed to be the perfect solution to their father's health care.
He
would be able to stay in the house on Nancy Creek Road and wouldn't
have to go into a nursing home.
Elizabeth Crist was seventy-six, a cheerful, healthy, and intelligent
woman.
She needed no care at all herself-but she had a bad knee and
had suffered herniated spinal disks in the past so she couldn't lift
her husband.
They had been married a very long time and loved each other
devotedly.
Having Pat on duty would allow Betty to be with her husband for company
in the days he had left.
Susan and Bill Alford were still living in Florence, Alabama, in 1987,
and they breathed a sigh of relief when there was a period of respite
from the family problems that usually bubbled up out of Georgia.
Pat
seemed to adore Adam and grudgingly agreed that childbirth hadn't