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[H999.Ebook] Download Never Leave Me: A True Story of Marriage, Deception, and Brutal Murder (St. Martin's True Crime Library), by John Glatt

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Never Leave Me: A True Story of Marriage, Deception, and Brutal Murder (St. Martin's True Crime Library), by John Glatt

Never Leave Me: A True Story of Marriage, Deception, and Brutal Murder (St. Martin's True Crime Library), by John Glatt



Never Leave Me: A True Story of Marriage, Deception, and Brutal Murder (St. Martin's True Crime Library), by John Glatt

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Never Leave Me: A True Story of Marriage, Deception, and Brutal Murder (St. Martin's True Crime Library), by John Glatt

In a quiet community of million dollar homes and shiny SUVs, the Nyce family projected the very image of success. Dr. Jonathan Nyce, an asthma sufferer, had achieved medical breakthroughs that made him rich―and offered hope to countless people. Michelle's beauty made her an object of desire. And adultery was her husband's worst nightmare.

Police found Michelle's Land Cruiser floating in a frigid creak near the family home. When forensic investigators examined Michelle's horribly battered body, they knew she had not died in the car. Or by accident.

Soon, the truth began to emerge. Of a brilliant man whose beautiful wife had a lover she could not stay away from. Of a family―including three innocent children―pushed to the breaking point. And of one brutal moment, when a man finally ended his torment by horrifically murdering the woman he loved...

  • Sales Rank: #1374115 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-05-30
  • Released on: 2006-05-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.63" h x .96" w x 4.22" l, .38 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 352 pages

From the Back Cover

HE WAS A BRILLIANT PHARMACOLOGIST.
SHE WAS A FILIPPINO BEAUTY.
In a quiet community of million dollar homes and shiny SUVs, the Nyce family projected the very image of success. Dr. Jonathan Nyce, an asthma sufferer, had achieved medical breakthroughs that made him rich―and offered hope to countless people. Michelle's beauty made her an object of desire. And adultery was her husband's worst nightmare.

THEY LIVED THE AMERICAN DREAM…
Police found Michelle's Land Cruiser floating in a frigid creak near the family home. When forensic investigators examined Michelle's horribly battered body, they knew she had not died in the car. Or by accident.

―UNTIL IT CAME CRASHING TO AN END...
Soon, the truth began to emerge. Of a brilliant man whose beautiful wife had a lover she could not stay away from. Of a family―including three innocent children―pushed to the breaking point. And of one brutal moment, when a man finally ended his torment by horrifically murdering the woman he loved...

About the Author
English-born John Glatt is the author of Lost and Found, Secrets in the Cellar, Playing with Fire, and many other bestselling books of true crime. He has more than 30 years of experience as an investigative journalist in England and America. Glatt left school at 16 and worked a variety of jobs-including tea boy and messenger-before joining a small weekly newspaper. He freelanced at several English newspapers, then in 1981 moved to New York, where he joined the staff for News Limited and freelanced for publications including Newsweek and the New York Post. His first book, a biography of Billy Graham, was published in 1981, and he published For I Have Sinned, his first book of true crime, in 1998. He has appeared on television and radio programs all over the world, including Dateline NBC, Fox News, A Current Affair, BBC World News, and A&E Biography. He and his wife Gail divide their time between New York City, the Catskill Mountains and London.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One
The One That Got Away

Jonathan Nyce was the third consecutive namesake in his family. Always fascinated with his ancestry, he once researched his family tree, going back to the Eighteenth Century, when a female member of the family married a native American Indian.

His grandfather Jonathan Nyce had come from Trappe, Pennsylvania, and was a builder. His father, Jonathan Jr., had been born in 1925, growing up around Collegeville, a rural blue-collar northern suburb of Philadelphia.

The Nyces were a prominent family in the area, and Jonathan Jr.’s Uncle Wesley was a daredevil stunt pilot, with his own touring aerial show. In 1939 he’d bought the Pottstown Limerick Airport for the knock-down price of $50,000 before becoming a test pilot for the American Air Force.

“Uncle Wes tested B49s,” said his nephew proudly. “One time he didn’t bail out in time, and crashed into a dump.... he wasn’t hurt though.”

Unfortunately, Wesley Nyce’s luck didn’t hold out. In 1948 the fearless flyer was killed during an aerial display, when his stunt plane failed to come out of a roll.

“It was a tragedy,” said Jonathan Jr. “He was killed in front of his family.”

Jonathan Jr. also held a pilot’s license, but joined the U.S. Navy as a teenager, during the Second World War. Soon after his discharge in November 1945, he met a pretty young girl of Polish descent named Emma Dusea, at a local dancehall. The two found much in common, sharing a passion for ballroom dancing, and were soon dating.

“We met dancing,” said Emma. “And we’ve been going to dances ever since.”

On February 26, 1949, they married in Delphi, Pennsylvania, and settled in Skippack, Pennsylvania, where the mechanically gifted Jonathan Jr. found a job running a hosiery mill.

“We had ninety-six machines,” he remembered. “I guess you could say I designed things, and I made special stockings for showgirls.”

Before long Emma became pregnant, and on May 26, 1950, Jonathan Wesley Nyce was born in Lansdale, Pennsylvania. Named after the family flying ace, he was the first of four sons Emma would bear Jonathan Jr. Two years later David was born, followed by Michael in 1955, and their youngest son Richard came two years later.

Money was tight in the Nyce household and Jonathan Jr. often had a tough time making ends meet on the scant wages of a stockingmaker. So when Jonathan was four, the family moved to Gettysburg, where his father found a better paying job at another mill, as well as moonlighting for several others for extra money.

Later Jonathan would often tell a fanciful story of how in 1953, his father narrowly missed making a huge fortune.

“My father influenced me because of something he didn’t do,” Nyce would cryptically explain to U.S. 1 newspaper in 1999. “He worked around the clock one night to design the machinery to knit the first pair of pantyhose. But because he had a new family, he was unable to capitalize on that discovery, whereas his partner was able to run with it.”

According to Jonathan, his father then gave him savvy business advice, which he had lived by ever since: That if he was ever in a similar position, he should “capitalize” on the opportunity, as there may not be another.

“I honestly think that’s one of the things that later drove Jonathan,” said his future mentor at East Carolina University, Dr. Wallace R. Wooles. “He wasn’t about to make that mistake again.”

Today his father, now 80, lays no claim to inventing the first pantyhose-manufacturing machine.

“I don’t know,” he says wistfully. “I doubt that I invented it.”

In 1955, the Nyce family moved again, this time to Norristown, and Jonathan began first grade at St. Patrick’s School, where he made his first Catholic communion.

As a child, Jonathan was a loner, preferring his own company to that of the other children in his primary school. He had difficulty adjusting socially, and was a serious, quiet boy, who largely lived in his own make-believe world.

But he had a vivid imagination and loved to write stories and poetry.

“He wrote beautiful poems,” said his mother, Emma. “He was very good.”

As a young child, Jonathan was fascinated by science, and was always doing experiments of one kind or another. He dreamed of becoming a doctor.

“I guess in our family, pilots and doctors are the main occupations,” said his father, as his sons would later be split between both professions.

In 1957, the Nyce family finally settled down in a large ranch-style house on Mill Road in Collegeville, Pennsylvania, where Jonathan Jr. and Emma live to this day.

“We moved here when Jonathan was seven,” said his mother. “Our baby [Richard] was just born.”

Growing up, Jonathan and his brother Michael both suffered from acute asthma and were prone to attacks at any time. It was a terrible physical handicap for a child, making Jonathan feel vulnerable and insecure.

“It’s hard to imagine something worse than not being to breathe,” he would later explain.

By the time he was 12 years old, Jonathan was six feet tall, standing head and shoulders above his grade school friends. But he soon put his height to his advantage on the school basketball court, where he discovered a passionate love of the game.

Jonathan played center in grade school and also regularly played pick-up games with his father and three brothers, in their Mill Road back yard.

“We’d play a lot of basketball,” said Jonathan Jr. “We had a lot of fun.”

When the tousle-haired blonde boy started at Methacton High School, directly behind his home, he was as “skinny as a beanpole.”

Jonathan was “little better than average” academically, according to his father, and his favorite subject then was English. The future medical pioneer displayed little obvious aptitude for the sciences at this point.

“He loved to write,” said his father. “He was always interested in the medical field and then he got more interested as he got older.”

Methacton had a solid reputation as a quality public high school, with a flexible curriculum tailored to each pupil’s needs.

Jonathan’s gigantic size—he would ultimately reach six feet, four inches—set him aside from the other boys. But beneath his quick wit and geniality lay a sensitive, painfully shy boy, who never truly felt comfortable in social situations.

“He was the biggest guy in the school,” remembered Eugene Hallman, who became close friends with him in seventh grade, when they took several classes together. “He wasn’t one of the most popular kids in school, but we got along.”

Jonathan was soon picked to play for the school’s basketball team, the Methacton Warriors, where he proved an effective defensive center guard. He also represented the school at tennis, as well as being active in student government and selling advertising for the student newspaper, Smoke Signals.

His best friend at Methacton was Samuel Colville, who also happened to be the school’s second tallest boy. According to their classmates, both boys vied for the attentions of a pretty girl named Sue Wessner, who briefly dated both of them. Samuel Hamme, a fellow Methacton student, says Sue was as “outgoing” as Jonathan was “introverted.” Soon after the junior prom, where Sue was Jonathan’s date, they split up, remaining close platonic friends until they left school.

Jonathan Nyce might have been tall and handsome, but there was also something awkward and ungainly about him. He was nervous around girls, seldom venturing outside the security of his small circle of friends.

“He wasn’t what you’d call a ladies’ man,” said Hamme, who was also on the Warriors basketball team. “He just really wasn’t.”

He remembers Jonathan as “quiet, reserved, but a nice guy,” and difficult to get close to.

“I didn’t party with him that much,” said Hamme. “He wasn’t considered one of the more popular kids.”

Eugene Hallman also remembers his friend as “fairly backward,” when it came to dating girls.

“He was awkward,” said Hallman. “But we were the same in that way.”

All through his high school and college years he never had a proper girlfriend after Sue, although he did manage to find a date for the senior prom. And while his friends went out on dates, he preferred to study and pursue his own scientific experiments.

“Jonathan was always interested in medicine as a teenager,” remembered his father. “He always did a lot of experiments.”

One day when he was seventeen, his parents came home to discover an “awful” smell, coming from the kitchen.

“He had a raccoon in a pot on the stove in Clorox,” said his father. “He decided he’d cook it and take the meat off because he wanted to see its skeleton.”

His mother explained that Jonathan had obtained the raccoon carcass from a furrier, to study its anatomy.

“But that was nothing out of the ordinary,” she explained. “He was just learning.”

Jonathan and Eugene Hallman co-founded Methacton’s Explorers troop, an offshoot of the Boy Scouts. They recruited several other boys into the group, selecting c...

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
the sooner the better, just go
By HoppyGuy
Leave me please, the sooner the better, just go!

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
INTERESTING READ
By CASSANDRA
John Glatt's research was well done. Reading NEVER LEAVE ME, gives the reader excellent insight re: both the victim's and the accused's background. With that info you can understand where both Dr. Nyce and his wife, Michelle, were in their marriage.
Objectively written. I felt compassion for the children, the Dr.'s family and Michelle's family.
I will read other Glatt's books.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Good read that is unfortunately a true story....
By Ciao Bella!
This is a good book if you can get past the grammatical errors. It will be interesting to see what the future holds for this man...."mark my words."

See all 43 customer reviews...

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