Read Love Her To Death Online

Authors: M. William Phelps

Love Her To Death (21 page)

So Roseboro had some trepidation regarding the stakes of committing adultery and getting caught; he knew damn well that, in his case, he stood to lose just about everything he had.

On Tuesday, July 1, 2008, Angie e-mailed her lover. As the morning wore on, they became engaged in an e-conversation about how the relationship had developed over the course of the past several weeks. Angie said Roseboro had “composed himself really well” during that period when he was stealthily watching her from afar. She called him a “gentleman.” She said it was still hard for her to imagine that
the
Michael Alan Roseboro actually loved her. And now that they were actually together, the thought of it all was something she was having a tough time wrapping her brain around.

Roseboro responded with one of the longer e-mails he would ever send to Angie Funk. He talked about “a journey” his “heart” was taking him on—one he thought he could never have expected in his lifetime. He said it was a
“ride that [he] never wanted to see end.” Part of the allure driving the relationship, he added, was to “see what the future holds for us.” He couldn’t wait to see what it was; nor could he wait to “roll over,” as he put it, each morning and tell Angie how much he loved her. “I know it is going to happen,” he added, before saying how Angie “rocked” his “world” and that he was in “awe” of her.

They saw each other the following morning at Turkey Hill. Roseboro explained in an e-mail later on that morning how he “could cry every time” Angie smiled at him inside that tiny convenience store with the dirty floors and coffee-stained counters. She had always looked “so perfect” in the mornings, he said. Farther along in the e-mail, Roseboro gave Angie the website URL for a resort in Turtle Island, Fiji. He said he could have never seen himself horseback riding along the beach in Fiji, but Angie had brought that romantic, free-spirited side out of him, and he now looked
forward
to it. He sketched out how great it was going to be to ride horses side by side along the shoreline, the water crashing at the hooves of their horses, the two of them holding hands as the horses walked slowly behind them.

The next series of e-mails were a combination of the transparency most adulterous affairs brought out of those involved, not to mention the utter disregard for the shame Roseboro had. He carried on and on, for example, about how he had never felt loved and how his love for Angie had no limitations. He never considered that making love to a woman “could be so consuming” and “passionate” and “tender” and “gentle” and “wonderful.” He never thought it would be possible to work with his wife, but now that he knew Angie’s love, that idea was not only a possibility, it was going to be a reality: apparently, Angie was going to become part of the family business as soon as he dumped Jan and married her.

Beyond that, Roseboro said he was feeling emotions he had never experienced in his marriage with Jan.
Near the end of the e-mail, if he had to, Roseboro said, he would “die for” Angie.

That last e-mail had made Angie fight back tears of emotion while at work, according to what Roseboro wrote on the morning of July 3. Angie was so overcome by the tenderness and love Roseboro had shared, it took everything she had not to cry in front of the girls and guys in her office.

In response, Michael Roseboro said he couldn’t help himself. He wanted to be “completely open and honest with” her. No matter what. And if there was ever a doubt in her mind about the love he felt, Roseboro wrote that he would gladly give up “everything I have if that’s what it” took to be “your husband.”

This sparked some anxiety on Angie’s part. She didn’t want to, obviously, hold that much power over someone’s existence. In saying this, it would appear that Angie Funk was grounded more in reality than her smitten lover. She said she would never ask him to give up everything, because sooner or later he would resent her for doing it. There would come a day, Angie was certain, when Roseboro would throw it all back in her face. She didn’t want their relationship to begin with this dark cloud hovering over it. She was glad she made Roseboro happy, Angie wrote, but “I am not the only thing that makes you happy.” She assumed his kids provided a warm feeling in his heart that she could never hold a candle to.

Michael Roseboro never answered the e-mail with any sort of antidotal response to her trepidation and concern.

July Fourth weekend came. On Saturday afternoon, Angie Funk and Michael Roseboro met and had sex. By Monday morning, Roseboro was giddy again, talking about how much fun he was having with Angie, sneaking around and hanging out together. There’s no doubt
that part of the thrill for Roseboro was in running around town, hiding from their spouses and friends: that double-life scenario he had been living for a decade or more. There was one time when Roseboro met Angie at a local Costco shopping mart in Lancaster County. They were frolicking around the megastore like an old married couple shopping for their family, when Roseboro spotted somebody he knew, and Angie conspicuously slipped away from him so as not to be noticed, later having the audacity to tell DA Craig Stedman, downplaying the moment, “I went on my way … [because] I had shopping to do and I wanted to get home.”

From the hundreds of pages of e-mails left behind by Roseboro and Angie, considering how fast the relationship progressed and how immature and terribly lust-struck Michael Roseboro sounded during this period, it’s quite clear he was having the time of his life, screwing Angie Funk any chance he got, while maintaining that family man image at home. In his mind, Roseboro had the best of both worlds. He wrote Angie that he had never thought of ever looking forward to Mondays, but because he could see her at the store, talk on the phone, text and e-mail all day long, Mondays were now well worth getting up for. That “Saturday afternooner,” he added, coining a phrase in an e-mail on Monday morning, “didn’t hurt either.”

Wink-wink.

What Roseboro didn’t know was that a turn of events was about to take place in his life with Angie that would change everything. Long before Jan Roseboro was murdered, a set of circumstances began in Michael Roseboro’s life with Angie, placing a tremendous burden on the man, with the potential to cause a great crisis, or scandal, not to mention embarrassment.

This, mind you, beyond the affair with Angie being exposed.

While Angie was beginning to show signs that all of the lust-filled, teenage-inspired romantic e-chitchat was fun and sounded good, her mind raced. This as Roseboro sent her messages that included gems of prose to the tune of, “You have unleashed the lion in me….”

Angie wrote and asked Michael Roseboro what time he was leaving for his first funeral that morning. She wanted to know if it was at a church or the funeral home? Apparently, Angie Funk wanted to attend. She needed to see her man.

It sounded urgent.

32

Every problem that came between Michael Roseboro and Angie Funk, the undertaker quickly learned, could be resolved with another overstated, oversexed e-mail, perhaps opening with a scene of them holding hands and running into the sunset along the shoreline while dolphins crested on the horizon. Michael kept sketching the image of the dream Angie now believed in, without letting up. On July 7, for instance, the obsession of the day became Angie’s face. It was “so beautiful,” Michael said in the beginning of his first e-mail. He felt the love she had for him in every smile, adding that her “eyes sparkle,” even though, he said, he could “see the naughty side coming out” of that surprisingly subtle twinkle. Angie was “magnificent” this morning. His “dream come true.” She was “every tear that” he shed. Just a simple touch by this woman sent a shiver down Roseboro’s spine.

Angie never documented or later talked about why she wanted to see her lover so urgently that morning. Maybe she just wanted to be with him. Or perhaps ask Michael Roseboro what was going on at home: was he making any progress with that little problem of having a wife and four kids?

But the following morning, July 8, a day both Angie and Roseboro would have trouble forgetting in the weeks, months, and even years to come, Roseboro had sex on his mind. When he saw Angie at Turkey Hill, he said an hour later in an e-mail, he had pictured her not wearing any panties. He felt so lucky, he claimed, standing there, mixing his coffee, chatting with townies, watching Angie waltz in, knowing that someday she was going to be his wife—and that later on that afternoon, she was going to be servicing him with that killer body.

Michael kept feeding Angie little nuggets to keep her going. Here, this morning, he said that when the time was “right, my love for you will be a secret to nobody.” Beyond telling Angie that every kiss was something born out of a deep passion he had never felt in life before meeting her, he said it made him “weak in the knees” to touch her lips with his—“literally.” He was speechless, he added, but obviously that was just a turn of phrase, because Roseboro couldn’t stop writing, texting, or talking on the phone to Angie. He couldn’t wait, he said, until their lives became “one life.” Near the end of that over-the-top e-mail, he said pointedly, “I am going to marry you….”

Angie bought it all.

Hook. Line. Sinker.

Any worry or fear she had could always be wiped away by a few morning e-mails from her lover. Michael Roseboro, the accomplished cheater, had a way of making everything sound so perfect.

Angie wrote back explaining how she had “read that e-mail you sent several times….” She called it “beautiful,” same as the love they shared for each other. There were times, Angie Funk continued, when it was overwhelming to believe that “you are so in love with me.” Here, in this e-mail, she admitted to having been “attracted” to Michael Roseboro “for years.”

With words alone, Roseboro had turned Angie back
around and kept her focused not on the future, the next day, next hour, or the Outer Banks, but now.

The moment.

Writing back at 8:29
A.M.,
Michael Roseboro broke into a diatribe about what the term “soul mates” meant to him. It was so exaggerated, he must have felt a pang of childish volatility in him as he wrote it. He used every cliché associated with love imaginable, not sparing a word.

They made plans to meet for sex that afternoon.

“Yeah,” Angie later said, “July eighth, somewhere in that time frame,” speaking of an afternoon sexual romp she would be forced to remember.

How was it that Angie Funk was so sure it was
that
day she had gotten pregnant with Michael Roseboro’s child?

“Because that’s the only time when the condom broke,” she later said in court.

Broke?

Well, she added next, “Yeah. Or came off.”

Angie wasn’t sure which. She explained that when that mistake happened, she and Michael discussed it, but she could not recall any details about their conversation.

Others later speculated, based on knowing Angie, that she became impatient and made sure the condom didn’t work the way that it should have. Or told Michael to forget about the condom altogether.

A source close to Angie believed that Angie “needed this baby.”

Before the affair with Michael started, Angie would give subtle hints within the family that she had her eye on someone in particular—this, mind you, while still married to Randall Funk. “There’s this guy,” she said once to a family member. “We’ve had coffee…. He’s really nice.”

That same source later observed, “I never put two and
two together until later. It was the way she said it. She made it seem like they were ‘friends.’”

It was right around the time that the affair with Michael Roseboro started, some friends and family later speculated, when Angie began to say things like, “I want him (Randy) out! I cannot take him anymore. I want a divorce!” These were things Angie had never said in the past during family get-togethers. All of a sudden, without warning, she stopped bringing Randy around, and she spoke as if she hated him.

“This was all a setup on her part. There were neighbors in that vacant apartment Angie and Michael met in that said it would get a little loud in there at times, if you know what I mean.”

If there was the least bit of concern about the condom malfunction, and the slightest chance Angie Funk was going to become pregnant, neither Michael Roseboro nor his mistress expressed any fear in the e-mails they wrote after that particular sexual event. In fact, quite to the contrary, the e-mails post–July 8 were even more foolish and slapstick lovey-dovey nonsense than anything either had written previously. It was not a simple “good morning” any longer for her lover. Instead, “my love” was plastered on everything Angie wrote after that condom malfunction, with a “madly and deeply” tossed in from time to time.

By now, they were meeting just about every day at lunchtime.

“I can’t get enough of you …,” Angie said, repeating the same phrase in all caps at the end of the same e-mail.

Michael expressed his own amount of redundancy in his next e-mail by repeating the word “sexy” (in describing Angie) eight times—that is, before calling her an “angel sent from heaven.” He talked about how Angie
had been placed here, on earth, apparently, to “rescue” him from the life he had been living with Jan.

Was he insinuating that being with Jan and the kids was his version of hell? It would seem so, considering how the overly dramatized romance was becoming so natural for Michael Roseboro. It seemed every hour of every day was dedicated to Angie Funk.

Still, neither of them had the one thing Angie was beginning to get a little impatient with: freedom from their spouses.

Thus, the countdown started.

July 14, 2008
Eight days before Jan Roseboro’s murder

33

On that Monday, after another wild weekend of what must have been, at least by their estimation, crazy-wild sex, Michael Roseboro told Angie Funk she didn’t need to thank him for anything he did for her “… but I do appreciate what your love has done for me.” He must have bought Angie some sort of extravagant gift, because she was whimsical and blissful over that “thing” he had done.

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