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
"You know we're good friends, Tom," Riggins began.
"I got a warrant
here for your arrest, and your granddaddy has called us and said you
were home.
I don't want any problems or anything."
"That's okay," Tom said.
"It was me who told Paw to call.
I won't
cause you no problems."
And he didn't.
Tom Allanson walked out the front door of his house at
3:00 A.M. and was arrested for murder.
Riggins read Tom his rights under Miranda and advised him that there
were two warrants charging him with the murder of his parents.
He
studied Tom Allanson's face for a reaction.
He saw no tears.
Nor did
he see surprise.
The man before him seemed mostly very, very tired-and
quite possibly in a state of shock.
Riggins didn't question Tom.
Rather, he held him in the Pike County
'all for the hour or so it took for Detective Georg I e Zellner and
Sergeants C. T. Callahan and Bill Vance to arrive to transport the
prisoner back to Atlanta.
Outside, the gray rain drummed against the
courthouse in Zebulon and the wind scattered scarlet petals from the
geraniums in the stone urns.
It was just before dawn in Zebulon when the East Point officers
arrived.
"You've already been advised of your rights, but we have to
do it again," Zellner explained to Tom.
"We've got two warrants here
charging you with the murder of your mother and your father-" "And
that's about as ridiculous as it can be," Tom answered, his voice flat
with fatigue.
He turned around willingly and waited while the East
Point investigators looked for a pair of handcuffs big enough to circle
his massive wrists.
They drove back to East Point in a deluge.
It was officially the
Fourth of July now.
The tape of the East Point investigators'
conversation with their suspect was blurred by the loud drum of rain on
the police unit's roof and the steady swish-swish-swish of windshield
wipers.
"What happened this afternoon?"
Zellner asked.
Tom explained that he and his bride had had a "big disagreement" two
nights before-July 2-and that they had continued their "fussing" during
their trip to her doctor's appointment.
"I finally just told her I was
gonna leave, give her the money, the house, and everything else-I
wasn't any good for her-I wasn't doing anything but hurting her-and I
Just left and started for home."
Tom estimated he had left Pat about 5:00 P.m. the evening before and
walked and hitchhiked his way back to Zebulon.
"But I mostly
walked."
Tom told Zellner that he had realized how bad he was for Pat, that it
must be him who was making her so unhappy and sick.
It didn't seem to
matter how much he loved her.
But then he had changed his mind.
"About halfway home, I realized that was the worst thing I could do,
'cause she couldn't get along without me."
His story was simple.
He had fallen asleep from sheer exhaustion once
he got home.
He wasn't running from anyone, he said, because he had
done nothing wrong.
He hadn't even known his parents had been killed
until his grandfather had called him.
Tom was voluble about his problems with his father, recounting all the
acrimony and infighting over his recent divorce.
Tom hadn't seen his
father outside a courtroom, he said, since he had been kicked out of
the family home the winter before.
He hadn't wanted to see him, and he
certainly wouldn't go over to his parents' house when his father would
just as soon shoot him as say " Howdy.
He suggested his father had had enemies-someone out to get him ever
since he had announced for judge.
"But I don't know why anyone would
want to kill my mother," Tom said quietly.
"She's a good woman.
She's
always been a good woman."
Tom told Zellner-just as Pat had-that his ex-wife Carolyn was a woman
completely out of control, particularly when she drank.
"But they've taken her under their wings-since the divorce.
They paid
for her lawyer, and she works at the office with Mother.
But she gets
drunk now and then, and calls and tells me, 'I want to see you dead."
" For a man in his precarious position, Tom talked too much, coming up
with theories and obscure suspects.
He couldn't seem to bear the
silences.
His drawl was laconic and slow, nothing like Pat's
rapid-fire speech, but he talked a lot.
"There was a girl that committed suicide on my granddaddy's farm," he
suddenly remembered.
"She was an alcoholic.
I flat know my daddy was
playing around with her.
My granddaddy said Daddy got all her stock in
her company when she died.
But I know for a fact my daddy was playing
around with her-that old gal would get drunk and she'd just talk and
talk and talk.
That's back when I was in college."
The woman had been married, Tom-explained.
"She used to come over to
the house all the time, get drunk, and crawl all over him all the
time.
My mother wasn't there, and I don't think [her husband] knew anything
about it.
Tom paused in deep thought.
"You know, I still loved him as a father,
but it was kinda hard to understand at the same time what he was
doin'."
Tom denied that he had a bad temper.
He had never had a fight or hit
anyone-"off a football field."
"Paw called me tonight," Tom said, recalling his conversation with his
grandfather.
"I asked him to call the sheriff's back there, and let
them know I was here.
He said, 'Are you all right?"
and I said,
'Yeah, except for I'm going to Jail."
He said he heard I was shot, and
I said, 'Well, I'm not."
Tom had a scrape on one leg.
That was all.
He figured he had got that
somewhere while he was walking home from East Point.
Sixty miles.
A very, very long walk.
Tom was adamant that he had not been at his parents' home earlier in
the evening, or anytime in the past several months.
He himself had
begun to wonder-after talking to Margureitte Radcliffe-if maybe
somebody was trying to set both him and his father up, some unknown
enemy stalking them.
Both Tom and Walter had been getting weird,
threatening phone calls.
Could that be possible?
Was there someone who didn't care if both Tom
and Walter Allanson died, someone who might even have something to gain
from their deaths?
It was a far-out theory.
Too far out.
A dozen
hours after the murder, the East Point detectives were almost positive
that they had the right man in custody.
Tom Allanson.
As soon as Tom arrived in East Point, he learned that Pat had hired an
attorney for him: Calhoun Long.
On his attorney'sand his
wife's-advice, he had nothing more to say to detectives.
. . .
All murder seems senseless.
But this double murder seemed more so than
most.
Two responsible, well-known citizens of East Point were dead and
their son was in Jail.
He wasn't a man with a criminal background, nor
a man on drugs or on the street.
He was a man with a new marriage, a
fine farm, a good reputation among horse people and with everyone he
had worked for.
He was a good old boy, easygoing, likable, and kind.
Nobody but his ex-wife and his parents had ever had a bad word to say
about him.
Why would Tom Allanson throw all of that away in a moment
of blind rage?
Even Tom's demeanor on the long ride back from Zebulon warred with the
image of a man given to blind rages.
Rather, he had showed no emotion
at all.
His parents had not been dead twelve hours, and yet the three
detectives had seen no tears nor heard any choking up in his voice as
he discussed their deaths.
That bothered them.
Susan and Bill Alford were far away from Atlanta when they heard the
devastating news of the double murder of Pat's in.
laws.
They were headed to Colorado to pick up some prize Morgan horses
for Kentwood Morgan Farm.
Before dawn, they received a call at their
motel telling them to come back home at once; there had been a
tragedy.
Both Susan and her great-aunt Alma had had some foreboding of disaster,
a sense that "something bad was fixing to happen," but this news was
beyond anything they might have envisioned in their worst nightmares.
Pulling a still-empty horse trailer, Bill and Susan Alford turned
around and headed home.
The East Point police investigators would not sleep for another day.
Nor would they celebrate the Fourth of July in the traditional way.
At
the first clear light of day, they were back at the crime scene.
Detective George Zellner, Sergeants Maulin Humphrey and C. T. Callahan,
searched the interior of the house, and Sergeant Bill Vance and a
uniformed squad combed the sodden yard.
As Vance and his crew worked their way through ivy and underbrush
between the Allansons' house and the house to the east, Vance found a
shotgun 135 feet from the basement steps.
It lay where it had
apparently been dropped, its stock protruding along the fence line on a
dirt path that ran between the Allansons'side yard and that of Paul and
Harriett Duckett, who lived next door.
The gun was 40 feet from the sidewalk.
It was an Excel singleshot
shotgun, exactly like the gun that Walter Allanson had reported stolen