AC. Couple Hikes Appalachian Trail — A Month Later He Was Found Alone, Permanently Injured, Repeating One Name

On November 14, 2010, at approximately 3:15 p.m., a dispatcher in Mon County, North Carolina, received a call that would begin one of the most unsettling criminal investigations in the region.

A group of teenagers exploring the grounds of an abandoned sawmill near the Nantahala River had discovered a man sitting inside the deteriorating structure. He was crouched in a corner, clutching a rusted length of chain. His clothing had worn down into dirty rags, and his body showed signs of prolonged exposure and injury.

But the most serious injuries were to his face.

The man’s eyes had been permanently damaged by a corrosive chemical. He could not see the teenagers who found him. Yet when he heard their footsteps, he began crying out a single name over and over until his voice grew weak and hoarse.

The man was identified as William Taylor, a hiker who had vanished exactly 32 days earlier along with his wife, Mary Taylor.

His reappearance answered none of the questions surrounding their disappearance. Instead, it introduced far darker ones.

The story had begun on October 12, 2010.

At 8:40 that morning, a dark blue Jeep Cherokee turned off Highway 64 and entered the gravel parking lot at Winding Stair Gap in the Nantahala National Forest. The location was a familiar starting point for hikers looking for solitude in the Appalachian Mountains.

Two people stepped out of the vehicle.

William Taylor, twenty-nine, and his wife Mary Taylor, twenty-seven.

They looked like an ordinary hiking couple. Their gear was good quality, their boots were new, and they appeared confident and prepared. To anyone passing through that morning, there was nothing obviously unusual about them.

According to an email Mary had sent her mother two days earlier, the couple planned to hike roughly thirty miles north along the Appalachian Trail. Their goal was to reach the Nantahala Outdoor Center in four days. Mary described the route in detail and promised she would contact her mother on October 16 once they returned to an area with cell service.

That email became her final confirmed communication.

Later that same day, around 2:00 p.m., a group of tourists resting near the Waya Bald Observation Tower noticed a couple standing off the trail. According to later statements, the man and woman appeared to be having a tense discussion.

They were not shouting, but their gestures were sharp and uneasy. The woman, later identified as Mary Taylor, looked distressed and repeatedly glanced back down the path they had traveled.

When the couple noticed the tourists watching them, they immediately stopped speaking, picked up their backpacks, and moved deeper into the woods without greeting anyone.

That stood out. On the Appalachian Trail, hikers usually acknowledge one another.

It was the last confirmed time William and Mary Taylor were seen together.

October 16 passed without the promised phone call.

By October 18, Mary’s mother contacted authorities. On October 19, five days after the couple disappeared, the Mon County Sheriff’s Department launched a search-and-rescue operation.

More than sixty volunteers joined trained responders and canine teams to search the mountainous terrain. Helicopters scanned the forest canopy. The search focused on Siler Bald Mountain and the surrounding shelters and trails.

The forest gave them nothing.

No campsite.

No equipment.

No response to calls broadcast through loudspeakers.

Then, on October 21, the seventh day of the search, investigators found the first real clue.

A search team working three miles east of the trail discovered a hiking backpack hidden among rhododendron bushes.

It belonged to Mary Taylor.

The way it had been left behind was unsettling. The backpack was standing upright against an oak tree, almost as if someone had placed it there carefully. The zippers were closed. Inside, everything was neatly arranged. Clothes were rolled tightly. Food remained sealed. Her wallet and identification were untouched.

But some items were missing.

Her sleeping bag had been removed, along with her personal first-aid kit. Mary’s mother later said that Mary never went anywhere without that kit because of chronic migraines.

Why would someone leave behind clothing, money, and supplies in the wilderness but keep only a sleeping bag and medicine?

That question had no answer.

That evening, an ice storm hit the mountains. Freezing rain and snow turned the terrain slick and dangerous. Whatever traces may have existed around the tree were washed away. Search dogs lost Mary’s scent.

After two weeks, with survival odds now considered extremely low, authorities suspended the active search.

William and Mary Taylor were officially classified as missing under unexplained circumstances.

Their Jeep was removed from the trailhead and stored as evidence.

Privately, investigators had begun to suspect something far more serious than an accident.

Thirty-two days passed.

The forest had gone quiet again.

Then, on November 13, 2010, four University of Tennessee students entered a remote area near Tellico Gap, looking for a waterfall they had read about online. Ignoring warning signs, they left the marked trail and descended into a gorge through thick rhododendron.

One of them noticed something near a fallen tree trunk.

At first, he thought it was trash.

Then it moved.

It was a man.

He was half upright against the rotting wood, severely undernourished and barely conscious. His clothes hung from him in torn fragments. His wrists showed deep injuries consistent with prolonged restraint. His skin was pale and ashen from exposure and starvation.

But the most alarming injuries were to his face.

William Taylor’s eyes had been permanently destroyed by chemical burns.

He did not respond clearly to the students. When they tried to help him, he panicked and grabbed at them blindly. He repeated one word over and over:

“Jacob.”

The students immediately called emergency services.

While waiting for rescuers, one of them noticed a folded brochure fall from William’s pocket. It advertised the Pinecrest Motel, showing a rustic mountain lodge. But the address on the brochure led to an area where no motel had existed for decades.

William was taken to Memorial Medical Center in Asheville, where doctors spent hours stabilizing him. Tests later confirmed that the chemical damage to his eyes had been caused by industrial sodium hydroxide. His blindness was permanent.

Two days later, investigators began interviewing him.

William told a detailed story.

According to his account, he and Mary had left the trail searching for water when they came upon an abandoned hunting lodge called Blackwoods Hunting Lodge. There, he said, they met a bearded man in his fifties who introduced himself as Jacob. William claimed Jacob invited them inside to wait out an approaching storm, then threatened them with a rifle and held them captive in a basement for weeks.

He said Jacob had starved them, delivered strange sermons, and forced them to dig holes in the forest. Then, according to William, Jacob became intoxicated one evening and forgot to lock the basement door, allowing him to escape.

Mary, he said, was still alive there.

The account triggered an immediate law-enforcement response.

Using location details from William’s story—such as the sound of an old mill wheel and the smell of sulfur-like gas—investigators identified a possible location near Slick Rock Creek. On November 16, a SWAT team entered a decaying cabin hidden in the forest.

The structure largely matched William’s description.

Inside, they found moldy canned food, fragments of rope, and clothing belonging to Mary. A trapdoor led to a basement fitted with chains fixed to the walls.

At first glance, it seemed William’s story might be true.

But the forensic evidence began to tell a different story.

Investigators noticed that the chains were mounted so low that a person attached to them could only lie down or crawl, yet the surrounding floor showed none of the wear that would normally result from prolonged confinement. The lock on the basement door had also been carefully taken apart from the inside using improvised tools.

That detail deeply troubled detectives.

How could a man who was now blind, and who claimed to have escaped under extreme distress, have managed such a complex task in darkness?

The case shifted again on November 18, when investigators began reviewing William Taylor’s personal records.

What they found changed everything.

William had secretly lost more than $120,000 of the couple’s savings in risky investments. Mary, meanwhile, had been preparing to leave him. A coworker told detectives that Mary had consulted a divorce lawyer and drafted notes about alleged domestic abuse. She had also begun a relationship with a colleague named Jacob Miller.

William had apparently been reading Mary’s emails in secret.

He knew about the affair.

Then came the most damaging evidence of all.

Surveillance footage from a hardware store showed William, on September 28—two weeks before the trip—purchasing rope, industrial sodium hydroxide, and heavy padlocks.

The same types of items later found at the cabin.

At that point, investigators reached a devastating conclusion.

Jacob, the supposed captor, did not exist as William had described him.

The name had been taken from Mary’s colleague.

William had constructed a fictional villain.

As detectives reconstructed the case, they concluded that after leaving the trail, William led Mary to an abandoned quarry. There, prosecutors later argued, he attacked her fatally in a premeditated act. He then hid her body and moved to the cabin he had prepared in advance.

For approximately thirty days, he lived there alone.

He deliberately starved himself to appear like a victim. He injured his own wrists to support the story of captivity. He staged evidence throughout the cabin. Finally, he blinded himself using chemicals in what investigators described as an extreme effort to make his account seem believable.

He appears to have believed that no one would suspect a man in that condition of planning a murder.

On November 25, search dogs located Mary’s body in a quarry cave roughly forty miles from the cabin.

Forensic evidence indicated that she had died within the first days of the trip—most likely on October 12 or 13.

William had been alone for nearly the entire month.

Later, investigators found William’s diary hidden inside a hollow tree. It contained entries showing that he had been preparing the deception for months. Most disturbing of all, the diary suggested that he had practiced functioning without sight in order to make his final story more convincing.

The trial began in September 2011.

Prosecutors called William Taylor “the architect of his own hell.” They argued that the crime was not the result of panic or sudden rage, but of planning, resentment, and an obsessive need to control the story that followed Mary’s death.

The diary became central evidence.

The defense attempted an insanity argument, but it failed.

On October 6, 2011, the jury returned its verdict:

Guilty of first-degree murder.

William Taylor was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Today, he remains incarcerated at Central Prison in Raleigh.

According to correctional staff, he often sits alone on his bed, rocking quietly in silence.

Sometimes, they say, he whispers a single name.

Mary.

The forests of Nantahala have long since reclaimed the abandoned cabin and the quarry where the crime occurred. Vegetation has overtaken the paths. Weather has erased the signs. But among locals, the story remains.

Not because of a stranger in the woods.

Not because of an imagined captor named Jacob.

But because it became a reminder of something far more unsettling:

the most dangerous threats are not always hidden in the wilderness.

Sometimes they are hidden in a person who appears completely ordinary—until the truth comes to light.