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
bearing-down agony as if her extremities were caught in intractable
vises.
It was a familiar pain-not unlike what she had felt in the summer of
1987 when she had had such a terrible time driving home from Boppo's
house to Florence, A hands, kneading it was worse.
"I just had to keep
rubbinlgabmayma.
But this time, ' leaching out of them.
They hurt
them, trying to work that terrib so bad I'd wake up at night with the
pain."
stone from McDonough and announced Pat drove up to Brook that
she would take care of Susan.
"Mom wouldn't let me do bered.
"She took care of Adam, she anything," Susan remem and she tried to be
sure cooked for Bill and Courtney and Sean, up or tea and come and I
didn't get dehydrated.
She'd fix me so sit by me until she saw that I
was swallowing it.
I didn't now what I would do without her."
hey
made fun of Pat's Bill and Sean were hardly gratefu.
. T cooking;
worse than that, they made jokes (behind her back, of course) about
being afraid she would poison them.
it was an illkept secret that
Grandma Pat had been in prison for arsenic poisoning, and Bill and Sean
shared a certain perverse sense of humor.
"Mom was no star in the kitchen," Susan admitted.
"She tried, but-and
I hate to say it because it sounds mean-my mother is not known for her
cooking.
Sean and Bill wouldn't eat what she made.
Her 'famous tuna'
still had the oil in it and then she added mayonnaise besides.
She
never skimmed the grease off of spaghetti [sauce] or chill.
She liked
it that way, so she assumed everyone did."
Susan begged Sean and Bill to be more considerate of Pat.
But they just laughed and scraped their plates down the disposal when
Pat's back was turned.
Their eyes would meet, and, as if by
prearranged signal, the two of them would sneak out to eat in a
restaurant.
Susan appreciated having her mother there; she was so weak that she
could no longer take care of Adam or the house.
Her weight dropped by
twenty pounds or more.
At first, she only had dark circles under her
eyes, and then her eyes themselves appeared sunken in her skull.
She
had been ill before-those terrible six weeks in Alabama-but not as bad
as this.
Pat banned Bill and the children from Susan's room, warning them that
she was far too ill for company, but Sean was crafty at sneaking in to
see his mother.
"Mom," he asked her more than once, "do you think
maybe she's giving you something to make you sick?"
"Sean!"
"Well, she did it to people before.
She won't let us see you.
She's
down there banging pots and pans around like she's mad at somebody.
When is she going home?"
"I need her, Sean," Susan explained patiently.
"I wish she'd go home.
And I'm not going to eat what she cooks.
Neither is Dad."
Susan was too weak and sick to argue with him.
There were many nights
when Bill was out on the road and she needed another adult in the house
to help her care for the kids.
She was too weak and sick to realize
that she was actually living her own worst fear.
Her mother kept her
completely isolated most of the time.
Her mother had taken over her house.
No one came to visit Susan and she wondered why.
She didn't know that
Pat refused to answer the door, had drawn the drapes so that the house
looked deserted.
She passed on no phone messages to Susan.
"I found
out later," Susan recalled.
"My sisterin-law said she had come over
many times to see me, but no one came to the door."
it was Pat's
way.
She isolated people in her care.
She had kept jean away from Paw and
Nona, and Bobby Porter from Aunt Liz.
And now she had virtually locked Susan up in her own home, shutting her
off from everything outside her bedroom.
. . .
Christmas came and Susan was too sick to cook dinner.
Everyone went to Boppo and Papa's.
It was another holiday where
everyt@g seemed idyllic.
Pat had spent countless hours painting and
refurbishing an incredible dollhouse for Courtney.
Sean quickly dubbed
it "South Fork."
It had four tall columns on the veranda-wrapped with
red ribbons for a candy-cane Christmas lookadditions on each side of
the main house, lace curtains in all the windows, and black shutters.
It was the sort of thing Pat loved to work on.
Dolls and doilhouses,
little worlds of her own creation There was no dollhouse for Ashlynne,
which was unfortunate since the girls were almost the same age.
Courtney thanked her grandmother politely, but she was a little girl
far more interested in sports than in dolihouses and miniature
furniture.
As they sat down to eat, Adam's "Grandma Pat" moved his highchair four
feet back from the table so that he was sitting against the wall, his
view of the family blocked by an antique china cabinet.
Susan could
see he was about to cry, his face bereft at being banished.
She nudged
Bill and he moved Adam back.
The food was wonderful and
Susan tried to eat, but she felt
queasy after a few bites.
At home later, Bill
took a picture of her sitting in an easy chair in her nightgown.
She
looked like death itself, her eyes sunken, her skin the color of thin
parchment.
Susan hadn't been able to take care of Adam for a month, and in the
months ahead she felt no better.
Her hands hurt so badly that she
could scarcely use them.
Bill insisted that there had to be something
more wrong with her than the flu.
On January 19, 1990, he took her to
the emergency room at Kennestone Hospital in Marietta for testing.
Her
doctor had no idea why she was so sick, but he listed a tentative
diagnosis: ".079-9: Viral Syndrome."
urinalysis A complete blood
count, a sputum culture, and a yielded no information.
Susan was
dehydrated from vomiting; she was given intravenous fluids to stabilize
her condition and then released.
Bill wanted more testing.
He wanted
hair and nail clipping analysis; he wanted testing for arsenic.
Susan
absolutely refused.
"I couldn't even think of that.
I would not
believe that my mother would do that to me.
Not deliberately.
That was too awful to contemplate."
Pat continued to care for Susan.
She wasn't living with the Alfords in
their home in the Brookstone Country Club but she might as well have
been; she was there almost all the time.
Susan was grateful; she
didn't know what she would have done without her mother.
She began to
wonder if she had hepatitis or mononucleosis-or even cancer.
She had
been sick for three months and she just wasn't getting any better.
Adam was such a chunk of a toddler that she wasn't sure she could lift
him.
Her mother wouldn't even let her try.
Pat was very, very firm
about that.
She would not let Susan go near the baby.
Adam missed his mother.
And Susan missed him so much she could hardly
stand it.
One night as her mother moved quietly around her bed, Adam
woke up and Susan could hear him down the hall, crying.
He played for
a while in his crib, and then he started to cry again.
"Mom," Susan begged.
"I've got to go reassure him."
Pat glared at her daughter, exasperated.
"Do you want to kill him
too?
Is that what you want?"
Susan got out of bed and braced herself by holding on to furniture as
she moved toward the hall.
'Go back to bed!"
Pat ordered.
"I'll take care of him."
"Mom," Susan said, "he just wants to see me.
I've got to go in there
and see him."
"You want to put double work on me, taking care of two of you?
How
much more am I supposed to take?"
Susan gave up.
She crawled back into bed, but she could still hear her
little boy down the hall.
She waited until her mother was in the other
end of the house, then she crept down the hall to Adam's room and
picked him up.
"He was so happy to see me.
He put his little arms
around me, and he just patted my face and looked at me.
I think he
thought I'd gone away forever."
Susan didn't hear a sound beyond Adam's joyful noises; she was so happy
to be holding him again, and he was chuckling with glee to see his own
mother.
"I didn't hear a movement," she said, "but I half turned and
she was there-just staring at me.
I don't know why, but it frightened
me.
I jumped a foot and I said, 'Mom!
You scared me half to death!"
"What are you doing up?"
Pat asked co d y.
"Mom, he just misses me.
I've got to hold him."
"Go ahead, if you want to kill yourself and kill him.
I've already got you I to look after.
Nobody eve r thinks of me."
I
Susan lowered Adam into his crib and walked slowly back to bed.
The
house was warm, but she felt chilled.
Why hadn't her mother said
something instead of standing in the doorway so quietly, staring at
her?
Her expression had been so awful, so full of hate.
Evil.
For