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
killed Susan after all, although Susan had had that one bad "sinking
spell" six months after his birth when she visited at Boppo's.
No one
had ever diagnosed what had caused her illness.
Susan and Bill were also pleased to learn that apparently both Pat and
Debbie had jobs they liked, working as nurse's aides for a wealthy
couple near the Peachtree Country Club.
That was good news.
Susan was
hardly worried when she got a phone call from Boppo- "do you know how
much "Susan," her grandmother asked, money your mother makes where
she's working?"
"No, she's never mentioned it."
"Well, Debbie says she makes a lot of money-that your mother is making
as much as,Bill does."
"Oh," Susan said.
"I don't think so.
You know how Mom exaggerates.
Debbie does too.
I'm just grateful they both have a job they like and
they can work together."
Pat did seem to be making a little more money than she had in the past
.
At that summer's Siler Family Reunion at White Lake, North Carolina,
she proudly announced that she was taking care of her mother and father
in "their old age.
I have a big glass jar and I keep it filled with
money.
Mother can reach in there anytime she wants and get erself a
handful of money."
Susan knew that was ridiculous.
Despite the fortune they had lost in
legal fees for Pat, Boppo and Papa were still supporting her mother.
The money she made she spent mostly on herself.
There was a money jar,
but Boppo dipped into it only to please Pat.
Susan tried not to borrow
trouble.
Her mother had a tendency to be grandiose and there was no
way that Pat could be supporting Boppo and Papa; maybe it made her
mother feel ts and cousins that she was.
Pat was important to tell all
the aun over fifty, and she had always been dependent on her parents.
If and fiftycent pieces in a jar for Boppo, she put some quarters what
real harm was there in that?
Pat also became suddenly generous with the rest of the family, giving
them little bits and pieces of jewelry and old books-the kind of things
she liked.
She gave her grandchildren funny oldfashioned toys that they soon
discarded for plastic fads from Toys "R" Us.
But her own collection of
treasures of another era was growing larger.
Besides her Victorian
cards and her dolls, she added another collection: antique hatpins.
She said the late Mrs. Mansfield had given her-and Debbie-so many
things they admired.
Through the fall and winter of 1987, Pat worked longer and longer hours
at the Crists.
She explained that Elizabeth Crist's health had begun
to fail too so there was a lot more work to do.
It no longer sounded
like the ideal job; Pat and Debbie both complained that the elderly
Crists were penny-pinchers, pointing out how "common" it was the way
they lined their garbage cans with newspapers instead of plastic trash
can liners.
They said they had no place to sleep except a lumpy little
couch.
Still, Pat and Debbie stayed on the job.
It was the longest-running job Pat had ever had.
It ended in mid-June of 1988.
Pat explained to her family that it was
unfortunate, but there had been a problem with the Crists' medical
insurance.
"The company just refused to pay for aides anymore," she said.
"So the
Crists couldn't keep us on."
Colonel Radcliffe turned seventy-five in July.
The whole family showed
up at a restaurant to honor Papa.
Pat had saved up to get him a
wonderful surprise, an eighteen-karat gold lapis stone ring.
He was
very pleased.
He held his hand up for Susan's camcorder and described
the ring, right down to the intricate carving beside the blue stone.
Papa didn't look seventy-five.
He barely looked sixty-fit and
handsome-as he posed for yet another group of happy family pictures
with Bill, Susan, Debbie, Pat, Sean, Courtney, Adam, Ronnie and
Ashlynne, and Boppo.
They toasted each other with iced tea in Mason
jars.
It was a happy night.
With no further practical nursing prospects in sight, Pat started her
own business in her parents' home in McDonough.
She called her
enterprise Patty's Play Pals and had business cards made up.
She sewed
doll clothes and worked on antique dolls, restoring them to their
original condition.
She was wonderfully clever with her dolls.
Boppo
and Papa gave her the room off their recreation room and it soon became
a "nursery" of sorts.
Dozens of dolls, their fixed eyes bright and staring, filled that
room.
Being there was like stepping back in time-to the 1930s and then
further and further back until this century seemed not to exist at
all.
Pat seemed happiest in her doll room, or in the windowless closet
ad'oining I it that she turned into a stuffy little sewing room.
She sewed far into the night, her work area lit by a bare light bulb
swinging from an extension cord.
On weekends, Pat carefully packed up her Play Pals and drove to hobby
shows, swap meets, and flea markets.
"That made me sad," Susan
remembered.
"To See my mother at her age going around to flea markets with
her dolls.
I t seemed so humbling for her-almost worse than it was
when she was working at the pizza parlor.
She'd go to those tailgate
sales or swap meets and she was selling her doll things out of the
trunk of her car."
Although there were no more men in Pat's life, she made a very close
woman friend, a teacher named Miss Loretta.* Miss Loretta also
collected antique dolls and they had much in common.
They were both
plump, middle-aged women with one y lives and unfulfilled dreams.
Miss
Loretta had never been married.
ssive of Miss Loretta as she had Pat
rapidly became as posse once been of Hap Brown and Tom Allanson, and as
she still was of her mother.
She had never been able to hold lightly onto important people in her
life.
It was no different with Miss Loretta.
Pat clutched and
clung.
She could not bear for "her" people to have lives away from her; she
had to know about every detail of their activities.
Although some of Pat's exquisitely restored dolls sold for
hundreds-even thousands-of dollars, Patty's Play Pals wasn't another
job.
a consistent source of income, and Pat had to take She went to
work for the Golden Memories shop in Stockbridge, a pawnshop and
consignment store that sold old jewelry, small items, and just plain
junk that people .
brought in, keeping a percentage.
At least it was
more in keeping with Pat's interests right across the street, than
making pizza.
The pizza parlor was and she shuddered to think she had
ever worked there.
She made forty-five dollars a day at Golden
Memories.
At the end of each day, she would open the cash register by
punching the No Sale wn so heavy that it was key, and pay herself in
cash.
She had gro hard for her to be on her feet all day.
Pat bought
herself a folding chair at the Wal-Mart Drugstore and sat on that
between customers.
Golden Memories, he prob If Tom Allanson had walked
into ably wouldn't have recognized his former wife.
The frail and
beautiful southern belle had long since been buried under folds of
flesh.
Even the sweet voice that had once reduced him to tears was
vastly changed.
Pat either gave imperious commands or she sighed with
dull fatigue, her voice harsh and flat.
But, after fourteen years, Tom was still in prison.
And he was
married-at least common-law-to another woman.
Surprisingly, he held no
grudge against Pat.
He was not a man to hold grudges.
What might have been more devastating-if she had known about it was
that Tom never thought about Pat at all.
Once, in a moment of searing revelation, Margureitte Radcliffe had
confessed to Susan her own worst fear.
"I have nightmares about being
accused of a crime-falsely-and being sent to prison.
That's what I'm
most afraid of - " s though her Susan wasn't surprised.
Sometimes it
seemed a mother and grandmother shared one brain.
Although Boppo could
hold a stubborn grudge against even one of her own sisters, she had
always forgiven her daughter anything, and she had always absorbed
Pat's pain.
Of course Boppo feared the worst thing that had ever
happened to Pat.
Wherever Pat's emotions plunged, her mother's
followed.
She had practically gone to prison herself when Pat did.
Susan didn't confide her worst fear to Boppo-she didn't dare.
Boppo
would have been outraged.
"It wasn't a rational fear," Susan
admitted.
"At least I didn't think it was then.
I was afraid that Bill would
die, and my mother would move in and take over my house and my life.
I
could picture her locking the e-and not ever letting doors and not
letting anyone in to see m me out.
It was a suffocating feeling."
Bill Alford was transferred once again-this time back to the Atlanta
area.
The Alfords bought a lovely home in the Brookstone Country Club
area.
Sean was in high school; he had grown up to be a tall, extremely
handsome young man who often played golf with his father at the
Brookstone private golf course.
Courtney played golf too, the only
girl in her age category, and she took ballet lessons.
Adam was an
adorable little blue-eyed toddler.