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
the first time, Susan was actually afraid of her own mother.
By morning, the feeling had passed, leaving only a smoky hangover of
dread in her mind.
She had been sick so long it was sometimes hard to
think straight.
. . .
By March, Susan was still sick.
Her feet hurt so much that she hadn't
worn shoes, much less high heels, for four months.
And then, ever so
gradually, she began to have good days interspersed with the bad.
She
was far from well, but she was better.
Continuing the tradition of teenage-and pregnant-brides in the Siler
family, Debbie's eighteen-year-old daughter, Dawn, was getting
married.
Debbie asked Susan to take the pictures at the wedding and Susan
promised she would, all the time wondering how on earth she was going
to get dressed up, wear heels, and stay on her feet throughout the
ceremony and reception.
Dawn's wedding was March 10, 1990.
She was a beautiful blond bride,
and although she was a little queasy with early pregnancy, she was not
as nauseated as her aunt Susan was.
Somehow, Susan managed to take a
complete set of wedding pictures and stay on her feet.
Barely.
"I
didn't think I'd make it," she said.
"But I did.
I plastered on
makeup to give me some color, but I could see it didn't work in the few
photographs I was in."
Susan wore a white silk dress that was way too big for her, but she
cinched the belt over four notches.
The circles under her eyes made
her look ten years older than she was.
Boppo wore a lovely pale pink
crepe dress.
Pat wore her "marrying and burying dress"-the turquoise
dress that had once been Susan's maternity dress.
Debbie wore a very
expensive white satin brocade and lace dress.
She wore it very
carefully; she returned it to the store the next day.
It was, Susan acknowledged, a typical family wedding, at least for her
family.
On the surface, everything seemed lovely.
Underneath, there
were secrets, lies, evasions, and fears eating away at the very
foundation of the family.
Although not one of them would ever have admitted it, Susan and Bill
Alford and their children had lived a life-style that all of the
SilerRadcliffe clan envied.
None of them knew how very close the
Alfords had come to losing it all at Christmas, 1988.
It was a matter
of pride with Susan and Bill that they had handled their own problems,
pulled out of their economic quicksand, and gone on.
They almost made it.
But by the spring of 1990, there was not much
about the Alfords' lives that their relatives would have wanted to
emulate.
Bill's new company was in the midst of a buy-out too, and
Bill and Susan doubted that they could survive another job loss-even
after Susan's health improved enough for her to go back to work.
They
argued continually, and one or the other would storm out of the
house.
They were scared, worried sick about finances, worried about Sean's
mediocre grades, and worried about the future.
The emotional tension
was crushing.
"We grounded Sean too much and made him study," Susan remembered
regretfully.
"But we thought we were doing the right thing.
He was
sick of the tension and the fighting in our house-and I didn't blame
him.
It was such a bad time."
Sean was in love, and far more caught up in his girlfriend's family
than his own.
He graduated from high school in June, and Bill-who
found it difficult to let go of grand gesturesrented Sean a Cadillac to
drive to the prom.
Sean posed in his prom tuxedo for his mother's
camera.
It was to be one of the last happy pictures.
When he turned eighteen,
Sean moved into his girlfriend's family's home and completely turned
his back on his own family.
He wanted nothing more to do with them,
with their arguments, their worries, their lives.
"We wouldn't let him take his truck, and I felt guilty about that-that
was wrong-and I lost my temper and screamed at Sean," Susan said, her
voice full of pain.
Sean was her firstborn, her beautiful little boy
grown to manhood, and he he stepped out of his family's life as if he
had never was gone; been part of it at all.
hapter 7
Next-and very rapidly next-the Alfords filed a C bankruptcy petition.
They had no other choice.
The wonderful nouse in the Brookstone
Country Club complex was gone, and Bill was back on the road as a
salesman.
"We had no place to live," Susan said.
"We had no place to
go-except to Boppo and Papa's.
I was depressed.
Sean and everything we'd worked for was gone, and I'd
had to see Adam and Courtney give up their ittle girl, Boppo was always
rooms, their home.
When I was a l' the one who came to our rescue-but
we were grown-ups and it hurt so much to have to move in with them.
We
were so ashamed."
Boppo and Papa's little house in McDonough
was already crowded.
Pat had her wing, of course-her doll room, her sewing
room, her bedroom and bath upstairs.
She refused to let anyone walk through her entrance, so Papa quickly
built some rudimentary steps of unpainted two-by-fours outside the
kitchen sliding doors.
s ill livin r six days Ashlynne was t g with
Boppo and Papa five o out of seven, and she still slept in their
bedroom.
She had a room of her own, but Pat insisted it wasn't
Ashlynne's room; she called it "the guest room."
There weren't any other bedrooms.
The only place the Alfords could
stay was in the formal parlor.
There was no privacy, just a room with
oriental carpets and all the collected treasures from the Radcliffes'
tours of duty.
They would live there at Boppo's house, the eight of
themBoppo, Papa, Pat, Ashlynne, Bill, Susan, Courtney, and Adam -until
Thanksgiving Day.
And it would be the prelude to the unfolding of a
nightmare.
Susan had always believed in her grandmother no matter what, but this
time if Boppo helped herg she would be at cross purposes with what Pat
wanted.
From the moment they moved in, Pat made it clear that she
didn't want Susan and Bill and the children in her mother's house.
Perhaps it should not have been the shock that it was.
But Susan had
clung to the belief that a mother-any mother-would help and protect her
chid.
She was wrong.
Pat viewed Susan only as an enemy, a competitor for Boppo's love.
"My mother was outraged when we moved into'Boppo's house," Susan
said."
"She didn't want us there.
I had no idea how angry she would be.
She
was my mother, and we needed help.
But we were intruding on her
territory.
Just like Kent had.
Just like Ashlynne was.
She didn't
want us there.
She especially didn't want me there."
Adam missed his big brother, and he missed his own room.
He didn't
understand why they had to leave his house and all live in one room.
He was a very sad little boy.
He sat for hours in a chair by the front
window, his head on his folded arms, watching for something-or for
someone.
Susan was even sadder.
Her losses had piled one on top of another over
the past year and a half, and she had been mysteriously and dangerously
ill for four months.
Her body was well -She no longer suffered from
crippling pain in her hands and feet-but she could not seem to stop
crying.
At first, she tried to help with the cooking and the chores, but she
could not please her mother.
Pat watched her constantly and criticized
everything, from the way she washed a cup to the way she fried an
egg.
"I just gave up," Susan recalled.
"I finally just stayed in the living
room, sat on the couch, and cried.
Bill looked after the kids, he washed dishes, he did errands.
He would
sit around the kitchen table and talk with everyone, and he could still
make himself laugh.
He was wonderful.
I knew that he was feeling
terrible too, but I couldn't help him.
I was paralyzed."
Susan had
seen what her mother did to people who invaded her territory.
She
attacked where she knew they were most vulnerable.
She capitalized on
weakness, homing in on whatever would hurt the most.
Even though Susan
had been only a young teenager when Kent committed suicide, she
remembered how savagely her mother had attacked him.
And now she herself had become the target.
Susan's only defense against her mother's abuse, her sharp tongue, and
her constant criticism was to hide in the living room, appalled at how
increasingly depressed she felt.
When she looked into her mother's
eyes, she saw the same eyes she had seen the night she tiptoed down the
hall o to pick up Adam when she was sick, eyes full of hate.
Susan was so tremendously sad and so tired that she could scarcely
move.
She no longer cared to live.
But she had children to raise, and
she was frightened that she might do something irreversible just to
escape the pain she felt.
"I checked myself into Clayton Hospital,"
she said.
"In the old days, they would call what I had a nervous
breakdown-but they called it depression.
I sure didn't disagree with
them.
I was there for five days and I will never, ever forget that day
I came home.
My mother walked in, glared at me with loathing! and