Alice & Gerald A homicidal love story

Ron Franscell, 1957-

Book - 2019

"In 1974, Alice, a desperate young mother in a gritty Wyoming boomtown, kills her husband and dumps his body where it will never be found, she slips away and starts a new life with a new love with Gerald Uden. But when her new man's ex-wife and two kids start demanding more of him, Alice delivers an ultimatum: Fix the problem or lose her forever. With Alice's help, Gerald "fixes" the problem in an extraordinarily ghastly way ... and they live happily ever after. That is, until 2013, almost forty years later, when somebody finds a dead man's skeleton in a place where Alice thought he'd never be found."--Page 4 of cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Case studies
True crime stories
Published
Amherst, New York : Prometheus Books 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Ron Franscell, 1957- (author)
Physical Description
314 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, color ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781633885127
  • Prologue. Broken Country
  • Chapter 1. A Cruel Season
  • Chapter 2. Last Seen
  • Chapter 3. Tomorrow
  • Chapter 4. ... and Tomorrow
  • Chapter 5. ... and Tomorrow
  • Chapter 6. Under the Wind
  • Chapter 7. Bones and Shadows
  • Chapter 8. Wash This Blood
  • Chapter 9. The Hangman's Hands
  • Chapter 10. Black and Deep
  • Epilogue. Time and the Hour
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

Fascinating and disturbing, Alice & Gerald is, at first glance, the tale of a lovesick man who makes a monstrous decision to please his wife, with tragic results. While the events of September 12, 1980, touched the lives of many, Franscell's (Morgue, 2016) book first dives deeply into Alice and Gerald Uden's lives before they met, delving into Gerald's failed marriages, notably with his ex-wife Virginia who had two sons. Next, we meet Alice, who has her own checkered past, including murdering her abusive husband. Because they are both troubled characters, it is difficult to tell if Gerald acted completely on his own or if Alice was instrumental in his choices. Franscell paints Wyoming as the Wild West, and the frustration is palpable as police are unable to solve the disappearances they are sure are the result of foul play. The detective work that finally puts the case to rest, combined with the exploration of the human condition and the recap of the crime itself, makes this a worthwhile read for true-crime fans.--Carrie Rasak Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

From Chapter 1 - A Cruel Season One morning, a new neighbor showed up in the space next to Gerald's. A bigger trailer than his. No big deal, since folks who lived in mobile-home parks voluntarily gave up panoramas and privacy. Once Gerald's pathetic view was blocked, it wasn't long before there came another metallic rap on his front door. It was the trailer park manager. Hanging back on the bare ground behind her was a big-breasted, comely woman with long, dark hair and dressed like a dollar-store buckle bunny in a western pantsuit, cowboy boots, and dangling turquoise earrings. Not bad , Gerald thought. Two kids stood nearby, a towheaded toddler and an indifferent high-school chick who looked as if she might like to be anywhere else at that moment. They needed some help. A man's help.Their trailer's electrical plug was 110, but the park's hookups were 220. The manager knew Gerald was a handyman at the mine, so she thought he might be able to save everybody an electrician's bill (and a city inspection) with some under-the-table quick-fix. Gerald took a look, consulted with the power company, and got to work. It was lunchtime when he finished so Gerald offered to buy burgers at the Husky Truck Stop cafe. Their conversation was heavier than the usual get-acquainted banter. Her name was Alice Prunty. Her same story had been told in a thousand other trailer parks every day: She was a widowed nurse and single mom scrabbling for a fresh start. Although she was only in her thirties, she'd been married twice and borne five kids, three of whom were still school age or younger. She divorced her first husband, a cop in her native Illinois, and her second--a philandering Midwestern grain-elevator operator and World War II vet who drifted to Wyoming ranchwork--died from alcoholism, leaving her a pile of debt, an infant daughter, and a piddling widows-and-orphans pension from the US Army. So since that guy, Don Prunty, died a couple years ago, she'd filed for bankruptcy, toiled as a barmaid and bus driver, nursed a few months in a small-town psychiatric hospital, and farmed-out the kids to relatives back East when things got tight, which was frequently.  To hear her tell it, just another star-crossed mom busting her ass to hang on to the edge of a savage earth hurtling through time and space. Nice boobs , Gerald mooned to himself. "You like to fish?" he asked her. "I love it," Alice replied. "I know a place. . ." he said. He told her about Atlantic Creek, way up in the Shoshone National Forest, up above the old mining camps of South Pass and Atlantic City. It was barely wider than his truck but chock-full of little brook trout. They made a date to meet the next morning for a day of hiking and fishing up in the mountains. Alice was giddy. Maybe Gerald was a sucker for love, but he was hooked. Alice was easy on the eyes, earned her own paychecks, seemed like a resourceful gal, already had kids and a trailer, and she liked to fish. Damn . He barely slept. The next morning dawned sunny and warm. Alice showed up outside the trailer with her sprightly three-year-old, Eliza, and her own fishing rod. That impressed the hell out of Gerald. They all piled into Gerald's old truck and headed up the mountain with a can of worms and a picnic lunch, and they fished all day. Alice frowned upon the scrappy little brookies--she liked 'em bigger--but she was a good sport about it. She also kept a tight leash on Eliza, who never acted up once. Alice was in complete control--unlike Virginia--and that turned Gerald on. For his part, Gerald recited jokes from old comedy LPs he'd memorized. Alice laughed at all his stolen humor. Over a picnic of cold-cut sandwiches, Gerald listened patiently as Alice skipped through her life's arduous tale, never pausing long at any painful memory nor giving much detail. She'd been born to an unwed teenage mother in Denver, adopted by a young soldier and his wife, raised in an Illinois farm town, got pregnant and married at sixteen, birthed four kids in quick succession, divorced, married again to the boozer who dragged her to Wyoming to be caretakers of a historic ranch then abruptly died, stranding her and their new baby in this beautiful, god-forsaken place at the end of the earth. But there was nothing more for her back East. Her only chance to climb out of her hole, to make her own way, was here. There by Atlantic Creek, he felt Alice's pain. She was still young and earnest, and Gerald didn't think she deserved all the pain she'd already endured. But she was a survivor, not a straggler--unlike Virginia. He reckoned, if things worked out the way he hoped, that he could make Alice's life better. He could give her what she deserved. Later, they packed up their rods and their creels full of brookies, and hiked out. On the bumpy pickup ride home, Gerald knew he had a keeper. Any woman confident enough to venture into the boondocks with a stranger and bare her soul was a woman he wanted to ride with, he thought. In that long, hot, bicentennial summer of 1976, Gerald and Alice fell in love. Hard and fast. On one of their first real dates--playing pool at a Main Street tavern--Alice confessed that she, too, had been immediately attracted to Gerald when she first laid eyes on him. Then she beat him soundly at a game he thought he could win. After a couple more dates, they tumbled into bed. Not one of those forbidden teenager liaisons, but a full-on fuckfest between two consenting adults who'd already bumped a lot of other uglies. And Alice especially knew what she was doing. If Gerald had any reservations about her before he saw her naked, they now lay in a crumpled heap on the bedroom floor. It was dark outside when the grunting stopped and they slumped back on the wet sheets. Alice cuddled against him. It was the part of lovemaking he didn't like so much: talking. But Alice had a story to tell and she told it softly. There had been another husband. Her third. After the alcoholic one. A crazy man, a junkie, a door-gunner in Vietnam who'd been kicked out of the Army for being nuts.  Named Ron Holtz. She met him in a small-town VA psych ward where she'd taken a nursing job. They fell in love and ran off together to get married, even though she knew it was wrong. They rented a trailer house in Cheyenne, where he drove a cab to support his habit. Then he started beating her and threatening the baby when she cried. He boasted that he'd killed babies in 'Nam and he'd kill her, too. One night around Christmas, Ronnie Holtz went berserk, and Alice shot him before he could harm the baby. It was self-defense. She didn't have a choice. She stuffed the brute's body in a cardboard storage barrel and drove her Pinto into the frigid blackness to drop it down a remote, abandoned mine shaft on the historic ranch she'd managed with her other late husband. She raced home, hurriedly packed up her possessions, and left town before anybody missed either of them. And nobody ever did. They'd barely cast a shadow in Cheyenne. A few months later, she filed for a divorce, claiming abandonment. It was granted when Ron Holtz failed to show up in court. Alice wept on her new lover. A speechless Gerald, dumbfounded by the confession, just hugged her tight. She told him she wasn't sure if he could love her now, but he promised he'd never tell a soul. Never . He also reassured her that some assholes like Ron Holtz just needed killing, although he secretly wondered why she didn't just run away. Either way, lying there in the dark, naked and laid bare, Alice's secret became their bond. He didn't know why she picked that particular moment to reveal it. Maybe she felt safe with him, or to test him, or to nudge him a little off-balance. Or maybe it was a warning shot in case he ever raised a hand to her. But Gerald swore to himself he'd never let Alice go. She was a keeper.  And although he wasn't especially well-churched, it all felt to him like Adam and Eve, after Eve confessed to biting the apple but before the clueless Adam knew what it all meant. Excerpted from Alice and Gerald: A Homicidal Love Story by Ron Franscell All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.