J. T. Hunter - Tortured With Love: The True Crime Romance of the Lonely Hearts Killers
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Copyright @ 2020 JT Hunter
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission of the author. The unauthorized reproduction of a copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by fines and federal imprisonment. Please do not participate in or encourage privacy of copyrighted materials in violation of the authors rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
ISBN-13: 9780578720289
Cover design by: Art Painter
Formatting and Layout by: Evening Sky Publishing Services
Library of Congress Control Number: 2018675309
Printed in the United States of America
This book is dedicated to JBW with my own tortured love.
My story is a love story, but only those tortured with love can understand what I mean.
- Martha Beck, Sing Sing Prison
The strange, lurid case of Martha Beck and Raymond Fernandez, dubbed the Lonely Hearts Killers by the media, so captured the consciousness of the American public that they rank fourth on Time magazines list of the Top 10 Crime Duos in U.S. History. (Only Bonnie & Clyde, Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid, and Frank & Jesse James come before them).
In his discussion of the Lonely Hearts Killers, author Bruce Sanders described them as the most incredible lovers in the twentieth century, people belonging to a nightmare, living characters no novelist or playwright could employ in a plot with any presence of reality, and yet they were real enough, horribly so.
The story of Martha Beck and Raymond Fernandez is a true crime romance, however horrible or incredible it may be.
Im nobodys baby, I wonder why
Each night and day I pray the Lord up above
Please send me down somebody to love
But nobody wants me, Im blue somehow
Wont someone hear my plea
And take a little chance with me
Because Im nobodys baby now.
Im Nobodys Baby Marion Harris 1921
O n an otherwise mundane March day, a peculiar piece of paper arrived in Martha Becks office mailbox. It came with the usual medical correspondence and junk mail, giving no indication of its importance. Yet, this one particular envelope would change Marthas life forever.
The envelope arrived on a cool afternoon, the temperature hovering just below 60, the highest it had climbed all day in the Pensacola area of the Florida Panhandle. But Martha was not in the mood to enjoy the weather. She was still down in the dumps about her recently finalized divorce from Alfred Beck, a Pensacola bus driver who had married her when she was six months pregnant with another mans child. Although she had been separated from Alfred since May 1945, nearly two years earlier, the formal entry of their divorce had the nearly 27-year-old Martha feeling like an old maid doomed to live out the rest of her life alone. Martha was not unique in that respect in post-World War II America. With well over a million more women than men, the United States population of the mid and late 1940s left many lonely women in its wake.
A visit from Elizabeth Swanson, one of the nurses she supervised at the Crippled Childrens Home, temporarily distracted Martha from feeling sorry for herself. She considered Elizabeth her closest friend. When Elizabeth knocked on her office door, Martha had just started going through the mail. As the two engaged in the latest gossip and friendly chit-chat, Martha resumed sorting through the assortment of envelopes. The first was an advertisement from a Jacksonville company selling medical equipment. She quickly flipped past it as well as a few other pieces of junk mail until a mysterious envelope caught her eye. It was made of thin, pale-brown paper with the name, Mrs. Martha Jule Beck, typed prominently on the front.
Whats this? she asked, the question directed more to herself than her friend.
What is what? Elizabeth replied, sipping from a mug of coffee.
This...this odd envelope, Martha said, holding it up to show her.
Beats me, Elizabeth remarked coyly. I wonder who sent you that.
Im sure I dont know, Martha remarked, her curiosity now piqued. She turned the envelope over to inspect it further, and seeing nothing hinting at its contents, opened it to find a thin, paper pamphlet inside. It was a promotional mailing and application for the Standard Correspondence Club, one of many lonely hearts clubs operating across the country. The return address gave Standards location as Grave Lake, Illinois.
LONELY?, the pamphlet asked in large, bold letters. Let us help you find that certain someone. Join old reliable Club, 50 years of dependable, confidential service. Correspondents most everywhere seeking congenial mates, proven results. Interesting photos, descriptions FREE. There were several pictures of women spaced throughout the page, each next to a testimonial about a happy marriage brought about by contacts made through the club.
Now why on earth would they send this to me? Martha wondered aloud, taking a little offense that such a lovelorn club would be contacting her. Elizabeths coyness now morphed into a broad grin that spread across her face.
I have a confession to make, Elizabeth said as she started giggling. I wrote the club and asked them to send you information and an application.
Martha studied her friends face, deciding whether she was serious.
Whatever for? she asked in a tone matching the astonishment in her eyes.
Still giggling, Elizabeth moved to a chair closer to Martha and sat down beside her.
I originally did it as a joke, she explained, but the more I thought about it, the more I decided that you should give it a try. Three of my daughters are writing to me that they have met men through this correspondence club, and this is the very same club that I met my husband through thirty years ago. And after all, what do you have to lose?
Martha rolled her eyes.
I may be a little lonely, she acknowledged, but Im not THAT desperate. She glared with some annoyance at Elizabeth. I swear, sometimes I really wonder whats going on in that head of yours.
Martha tossed the pamphlet onto a pile of papers stacked on the side of her desk and made no more mention of it for the rest of their time together. But the seeds of intrigue had already been planted in her mind.
Later, after Elizabeth had left, Martha retrieved the discarded pamphlet and read it more closely. Part of the pamphlet contained a form asking her to fill out information about herself and write a letter detailing what kind of men she would like to meet. Sitting down at her desk, she carefully completed the form and took her time crafting the letter, being sure to mention how people often commented that she was witty, vivacious, and oozed personality. She also emphasized that she was a trained nurse with her own pleasant apartment. When she was satisfied with what she had written, Martha carefully folded the papers, enclosed $5.00 for the required membership fee, and licked the envelope to seal it. That evening, she dropped it in a mailbox on her way home from work.
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