Read Everything She Ever Wanted Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #Case studies, #True Crime, #Criminology, #Serial Killers, #Georgia, #Murder Georgia Pike County Case Studies, #Pike County
Lynn, who listened quietly to her concerns.
"Ma'am, all I can tell you is that he [Walter] has been shot."
"Shot?
.
. . What about Carolyn-Carolyn, Walter's wife?"
"She has been shot too."
Jean Boggs's knees buckled as she heard Lynn
say, "They have been carried to South Fulton Hospital and I would
recommend that you go there."
Jean didn't get much more information at the hospital, which was only
two blocks away.
The receptionist summoned a nurse and Jean begged,
"Please tell me something.
Just not knowing is killing me."
The nurse turned and went down a corridor, and another nurse
appeared.
"Could I see my brother and sister-in-law?"
"No.
Two bodies are just arriving back there and they have not been
identified, and that is all I can tell you.
You'll have to wait for a
detective to get here."
Both nurses seemed upset, and they evaded all
Jean's desperate pleas for information.
It was a nightmare.
Jean demanded to see Lieutenant Thornhill, who she
had been told was in charge.
She knew Gus Thornhill.
Surely he would
be straight with her.
She would identify her brother and
sister-in-law.
Who else was there?
Her parents were too old to go through this, and
she didn't even know where her nephew Tommy lived now.
Thornhill hurried over, and when Jean saw him he was holding Carolyn
Allanson's driver's license in his hand.
Her heart turned over.
"Are
Walter and Carolyn back there dead?"
she breathed.
"Yes."
"Can I see them?"
"Mrs. Boggs."
Thornhill looked away from her and took a deep
breath.
"I have known you a long time, and I feel like a friend of yours.
I'm
going to ask you out of friendship not to go and look."
"IV'hat haPPened?"
"Tom killed them.
No.
NO!
Tommy wouldn't do that.
It didn't make any sense to jean.
Vaguely, she was aware of a television set in the background.
The
shootings were already on the news.
Everyone was looking for her
nephew, Tommy, who was believed to be wounded.
All Jean could think
was, My Lord, I will have three to bury instead of two.
And then jean realized that she had to get to her parents and tell them
before they turned on the television.
It would kill Paw and Nona to
hear it like that.
Gus Thornhill said he would drive her to the elder
Allansons'.
As Thornhill and Jean Boggs left the hospital, they passed an ambulance
parked at the ER doors.
One of the two back doors was open.and Jean
saw a body covered by a bloodied sheet.
One bare foot stuck out.
Transfixed with horror, she was drawn toward the ambulance.
It took
both Thornhill and her neighbor to pull her away.
"Gus, I want the
truth," Jean said.
"Is that Walter?
Is that my brother?"
"Yes, ma'am, but I must still ask you not to look."
When jean and Gus Thornhill reached the elder Allansons' place on
Washington Road, she asked her father to sit down, but he stood,
resolute, braced, an old man who had known tragedy before and survived
it.
"Paw," Jean said softly.
"Walter and Carolyn have been killed -1 don't
know any way to break this to you any gentler-and they're looking for
Tommy, Paw."
Paw's first words were hollow.
"Well, I have been expecting something
like this."
When they told Nona, she began to scream and scream.
Her physician,
Dr.
Lanier Jones, came over to give her a shot so she could sleep.
Paw was worried sick about what might have happened to "the boy."
He
called down to Kentwood and the phone rang twenty times, an empty sound
in an empty house.
He would keep trying until he got Tommy on the
line.
When jean finally got home, she realized that she was still
clutching an envelope they had given her at the hospital.
She stared
at it blankly, wondering what it could be.
"I dumped the contents of the package I had into my hand," she later
recalled, "and it was my sister-in-law's rings and they were just
coated with blood, and with that I said, 'Oh my God, I just can't stand
any more!"
Gus Thornhill called Detective George Zeliner at home at
9:30
P.m. on the night of July 3 and asked him to come in to the station to
interview two subjects: Carolyn Allanson the younger and Patricia
Taylor Allanson.
When Zeliner arrived at East Point police
headquarters, he was given a rundown on what was known so far about the
double murder which wasn't much.
Zellner had been with the East Point
department for two and a half years, and he had been a detective for
only a year.
He was a thin-but muscled-young man.
It was ten minutes to eleven before Zellner could turn his attention to
Patricia Allanson, who was waiting nervously on one of the station's
long oak benches.
He saw a very attractive woman with startling green
eyes.
She wasn't crying; she looked exhausted and apprehensive.
The older couple with her were being very solicitous.
Zellner explained to Pat that under the Miranda decision he had to read
her her rights as she was-at least nominally-a suspect and/or a
material witness in the shooting deaths of her husband's parents.
Pat
signed the waiver with only a trace of concern.
With Detective Lambert standing by as a witness, Zellner began to
interview Pat.
"Mrs. Allanson, I wonder if you would start with this
afternoon?"
he asked.
"What happened leading up to your husband's
disappearance?"
Pat spoke rapidly and breathlessly; she had waited so long to talk to
someone.
Zellner had only to ask a short question here and there to
keep the flow of her thoughts channeled into some sort of order.
She began with her own numerous physical problems, her sleep
deprivation, and Tom's absolute insistence that she see a doctor.
"We finished shoeing horses in the morning.
. . . Then Tom brought me
in and took me to Dr. Thompson's office like he always does, 'cause I
can't drive without it hurting me.
. . . He walked up to the door with
me like always.
. . . It must have been threethirty-something like
that.
I got through at the doctor's and Tom still wasn't in the
waiting room, so I went outside and the jeep was there.
. . . When he
left me, he walked in the opposite direction toward the C&S Bank.
I
thought he was going up there to talk to them about a loan he has
there.
He was trying to get an extension on it because he had been
having to pay so much alimony and so much court costs and all and his
father had made him lose a couple of jobs he had, and he had been
begging and pleading with his father to leave us alone.
His father
would call and make threats and his father came out to our house last
Friday when I was cutting grass .
. . and exposed himself.7 .
. .
Then he [Walter] called and told my mother to tell Tom that he was
going to kill him.
. . . Tom had said several times he was going to
see him, and I said, 'No, just leave him alone.
Pat shifted gears suddenly.
"I waited and waited for Tom and he didn't
come, and he has never left me like that."
"What time did you come out of the doctor's office?"
"They took me so soon .
. . they weren't very busy today.
I went in
and he took the X ray of my shoulder.
I don't think I was in the
doctor's office over an hour at the very most.
. . . I went outside
and Tom wasn't in the jeep .
. . and I had the skirt for the costume
and I started working on it.
I kept looking at my watch and I went
back in the office and asked if I could use the phone.
I was going to
call over to my daughter's.
. .
. It wasn't like him at all and I was beginning to get worried about
him because of the threats his father had made to him.
The first thing
that entered my mind was that just maybe .
his mother and father had
driven by and maybe he was talking to them, or maybe he had gone to
talk to them.
. . . I waited and waited and waited.
Then I really started getting nervous.
. . . It was really getting
late.
. . . It must have been six because all those cars from across
the street in the professional buildings-everybody was coming out of
there.
I was trying to figure where there was a telephone.
. . . The
only telephone I knew of was in the King Professional Building.
I got
in the jeep and drove there.
. . .
Tom knew I couldn't drive that thing any great distance without it
hurting me.
So I tried to call his mother's office and there was no
answer-" "Where does she work?"
"At Dr. Tucker's office.
I looked that number up.
I had to go into
that chicken place and get some change.
. . . I was so nervous .
.
.
I didn't know whether he got run over by a car or something!
I started
thinking, Now just stop and think.
I called the hospital first to see
if there had been anybody hit by a car or anything.
I knew he had his