She had the insecurities that plague unbeautiful females. Married to Ken Reinert, Susan was an English teacher at the Upper Merion High School, a respected public suburban school. She was intelligent and had graduated from college with honors. She and Ken had two young children, Karen, the oldest, and Michael, who was born a year later. The family resided in Ardmore, a nice suburb on Philadelphia's exclusive Main Line. In the early years of their marriage, Ken served in the Air Force. Susan had adjusted well to being a military wife and enjoyed traveling as Ken was moved from a base in California to New York to Puerto Rico. She taught college English for a while in Puerto Rico, then stayed home after her babies were born. Ken left the military in 1971. Susan decided to return to work and was pleased when she was offered a position at Upper Merion. She was a good teacher, well liked by most of the other faculty and appreciated by her students. She had a special interest in filmmaking and was the teacher to see if a student was interested in audiovisual matters. However, in 1974, Susan Reinert was beset by a vague sense of uneasiness. She apparently felt that life was passing her by. This was, after all, the era of the sexual revolution, and radios were playing John Lennon's "Whatever Gets You Through the Night. " A lot was happening in the world. But not, it seemed, to Susan Reinert, whose life was divided between instructing pimply faced teenagers and caring for her family. Where, she wondered, was passion? She believed she found it in a fellow Upper Merion teacher, William "Bill" Bradfield. He was a ruggedly handsome, muscular man with intense blue eyes who sported a full mustache and beard. Bradfield was considered one of the most inspiring teachers at the school. He approached his subjects with an enthusiasm that the kids easily caught. He had started out as an English teacher, like Reinert, then added classes in Latin and Greek to his repertoire. He would eventually be elected president of the Upper Merion Teachers Union.  William Bradfield A man who enjoyed expressing affection physically, he was given to a lot of hugging. He was also popular with women and there was quite a bit of gossip about his amours. However, a factor in his popularity with women was that he did not give them the impression that he was just interested in sex. As Sue Myers, a fellow Upper Merion English teacher who lived with him put it, "I never felt he was out for a sexual fix." He seemed interested in women as people, in their ideas, values, and beliefs. He also tended to go after women who were not especially attractive. As an acquaintance cynically put it, "Bill Bradfield could smell insecurity and loneliness the way a pig smells truffles."
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