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
shelter-and love-when no one else would.
Pat's mother, Margureitte,
was the kindest woman he had ever known; she would do anything to help
her children and grandchildren, and Tom respected the colonel for his
army service and for his dignity and military bearing.
He pleaded with
Pat to marry him as soon as his divorce was final.
Pat couldn't take stress or dissension or disappointments.
When Tom listened to her speak of her longings, he realized that what
she wanted in this world wasn't that much; she just wanted it so
badly.
He vowed to do whatever he could to make her life so happy and calm
that she would regain her health.
Pat had one special dream-a dream that no man yet had been able to make
come true.
She longed to live on her own plantation.
More than a century had passed since the Civil War, but Pat yearned for
the genteel life of a southern belle as it was evoked in Margaret
Mitchell's novel Gone with the Wind.
She wanted her own
Tara
; she
wanted to be Scarlett O'Hara.
Somehow, someday, she believed Tom was
going to get her her own place, a spread of land where she could hold
her head up proudly.
A place where she could grow the roses she loved
so.
"I'm like a rose, Tom," she explained softly.
"And like a rose, I'm
selfish.
I want all the sun for myself, all the rain.
Roses need everything so that they can bloom and be beautiful."
She wasn't really selfish, he knew.
It was only her appetite for life,
for love, she spoke of.
That was one of the things he admired about
her: she reached out for life with her two hands, grasping all its
wonder and clasping it to her breasts.
She made him see what could
be-should be-for them.
Together, that first October, they came across a place that seemed
meant just for them.
Pat was having a good week, feeling strong and
healthy, and she and Tom went deer hunting.
He was so proud of her.
The way she tramped around the woods with him, cooked over a campfire,
and loaded her own gun, shouldering it as well as any man, amazed
him.
"She knew more about guns than most men," he said later.
"She had me
buy a .44 carbine so she could go deer hunting with me-that's a
powerful carbine."
She was such a remarkable woman.
Pat could do just about anything.
They cuddled together through the long cool
Georgia
nights, warming
themselves with a sexual fervor that had not diminished with
familiarity, but had only grown more intense.
So it seemed a good omen
for their future together when they found the red brick house with a
porch all around it in Zebulon during their hunting trip.
There was a
For
Sale
sign on it, and they learned it was the old "Hoyt Waller
place" and that Waller was selling it because he was divesting himself
of some of his many real estate holdings.
After Pat pointed out the tremendous potential just waiting to be
tapped in the sprawling farm, what they could do with it, Tom was as
wild to have it as she was.
The place was right on Highway 19 a few
miles north of Zebulon.
Its four hundred feet of road frontage was
fenced in with freshly painted white horizontal boards.
There were
soaring pine trees beyond the roadside meadow and a curving drive wound
between tall
Georgia
holly bushes all the way back to the brick house
and the barn.
"It was just perfect," Tom remembered.
"I wanted to stay there until
the day I died.
It had everything I ever wanted.
The house was a
brick ranch-style house.
It had a twenty-five-acre pecan grove plus
twenty-seven more acres.
It had everything you could ask for.
It was
the most beautifully landscaped place.
It had the orchards.
It had
the garden spots.
It had the vineyards.
Apple trees.
Pecan trees.
Pear trees.
Catalpa trees.
Rose
gardens.
It had a beaver pond on the back side of it, and the pastures, the
deer, the quail.
It was just a beautiful place.........
All they had to do was figure out a way to buy it.
Waller wanted
forty-two thousand dollars for the spread, and it would take some fancy
financing for Pat and Tom to swing that.
There was money in Tom's
family, all right.
His father was a successful
East Point
attorney who
had made a bundle of money in land deals.
Still, Tom knew his father
wasn't likely to help him out.
He couldn't remember the last time he
had done anything his parents approved of.
They were still so angry
about his second divorce, there was no point in even asking them for
help.
Anyway, it seemed that his father enjoyed watching him fail.
Tom was the last of three Walter Allansons.
Old "Paw"Walter
Allanson-was the first, and then came Tom's father, Walter O'Neal
Allanson, and finally Tom himself, Seaborn Walter Thomas: "Tommy."
Paw
and Nona, Tom's grandparents, were well up in their seventies, but they
had always been more like his parents than Walter and Carolyn Allanson
ever were.
Paw still farmed his place over on Washington Road in East
Point.
He had made a small fortune over the years and he was
frugal-but he wasn't stingy, the way his son was.
Tom figured and figured until he came up with what might be a way to
buy the Waller place for Pat.
He had long wanted Nona and Paw to live
near him, especially now that they were older.
His grandmother was in
failing health, and Paw couldn't go on forever.
Tom took Pat over to
meet them, and left her chatting with Nona while he and Paw went out
walking around the farm to discuss "business."
Paw and Nona were polite to Pat, although they were a little puzzled to
see Tommy with his third woman in a decade.
She was obviously older
than Tommy by several years, and Nona thought she dressed awfully
flashy.
The old woman was surprised when Pat told her she had three
children and that both of her daughters were already married.
Nona,
whose speech was compromised by a stroke, and who was too polite to
speak what was on her mind anyway, listened quietly as Pat rattled on
about her wonderful plans with Tommy.
Despite Nona's earlier
misgivings, she couldn't help but like Pat-and catch her enthusiasm.
Meanwhile, Tom explained to Paw about the place in Zebulon: the fifty
acres and the house and barn and all that went with it that could be
had for only forty-two thousand.
It was a buy that Tom couldn't just
walk away from-not without consulting Paw.
The two men worked out a plan.
Paw would give Tom the money for
twenty-five acres, and that money would serve as a down payment for the
whole place.
Tom would find a way to make the balloon payments due down the road.
Tom said he would like either to build or move a house onto that
acreage for his grandparents.
That sounded good to Paw; since Nona's
stroke, he had been doing both the outside chores and the inside
work.
He prided himself on the fact that he took excellent care of his wife,
but it would be nice to have a woman around to spell him and cook a
meal once in a while.
Tom assured Paw that Pat already loved both him
and Nona.
He had told her how good they had always been to him.
Colonel and Mrs. Radcliffe, Pat's parents, also helped Pat and Tom
with the down payment on the Zebulon property.
Their only request was
that they call their farm Kentwood in memory of Pat's brother, Kent,
who had died when he was in his mid-twenties.
Although Pat would have
much preferred something more romantic and evocative-like Rose Hill
Farm or Holly Hedge Stables, or even Tara Orchards-they called it
Kentwood Morgan Farm.
At long last she had her love and her piece of earth, a fine brick
house, and a barn big enough for all the horses she and Tom would
raise.
They would make it a showplace where they could host grand
riding competitions.
Tom could shoe horses and she could teach riding
and, afterwards, they could stroll hand in hand through her own rose
garden.
There could be nothing more perfect than the hushed twilight
of a soft Georgia night, and being in love.
Pat and Tom moved onto the wonderful property on Highway 19 in late
1973, and Tom immediately began to work on the place, sure his divorce
from his' second wife was imminent.
When he was truly free, he would
marry "his Pat."
Making the house just right for her was a labor of love and, as he was
able to afford materials, he remodeled and refurbished.
"I redid it
just like we planned," he said.
"We got lumber out at Fort McPherson
and redid the barn and the pastures.
I had such great expectations.
j'i at proved to be remarkably unhandy at home improvements and
although she picked up a paintbrush from time to time, the bulk of the
work was Tom's.
He didn't mind.
He was euphoric just to be with her and to have
Kentwood.
Ronnie, fifteen, moved in with his mother and Tom, although he was
certainly welcome to stay with his grandparents.
Pat loved her son.
She indulged him too.
She bought him anything he wanted and let him do
whatever he asked-except visit his father.
He missed a lot of school,
and Pat didn't push him to go.
He was both spoiled and neglected.