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
His survival became the focal point of his parents' existence.
Nona was always exhausted because she was up day and night turning
Walter so he wouldn't get bedsores.
Penicillin had yet to be
discovered, and strep infections of any kind were often fatal.
Paw and Nona didn't mean to neglect Jean, but her needs took second
place in their fight to save their son.
Walter and Jean had never had a solid brother-and-sister
relationship.
Walter was four years older than Jean, and their personalities were on
entirely different tracks.
Walter's illness distanced them even
more.
When Walter got out of bed after his ir parents were long siege with
rheumatic fever, the' so grateful he had survived that they gave him
everything he asked for.
To Jean's eye, her brother was always
greedy.
A greedy boy and a greedy man.
Many years later, when Walter persuaded Paw to sell him the back half
of the thirty-four acres he owned on Washington Road, Walter resold it
and made a handsome profit.
But Jean had asked her father first, and
she was both outraged and humiliated when she learned that Paw had sold
her brother the acreage she wanted.
Her efforts to please her parents had always failed.
Walter came first
because he was a son, and her father doted on her mother, but Jean was
left out.
The Allanson family relationships would always be distant
and strained.
Paw had become a gnarled, ornery old man, but he was
devoted and gentle with his wife, Nona, and he loved Tom.
As for his
own offspring, he might do business with his son, but he didn't really
care for either Walter or Big Carolyn.
He often ignored Jean.
Jean and her husband, George "Homer" Boggs, had two children, David and
Nona.
They were quite a bit younger than Walter's Tommy and as cousins
they would never be close.
The Allanson line had continued, but only
grudgingly.
Tommy was it for a long time.
The last Allanson to carry the name unless he had a son.
Years would go by when jean wouldn't see Walter.
And yet he was her
brother.
She may not have liked him very much, but she loved him.
She
had always assumed that, one day, they would settle their
differences.
And then, suddenly, it was too late.
Tom Allanson had often shivered in the emotional chill of his childhood
home.
"That's why I grew up being such a sucker for love," he
remembered years later.
"I never had any.
I can never remember-even
once-hearing my parents say 'I love you' or feeling them put their arms
around me.
. . . They showed they cared about me by giving me a good
education, they fed me, they took care of me, but that was their form
of love.
I understood that, although I found out later in life that I
wasn't exactly planned when I came along.
I wasn't exactly a
blessing.
But I was the kind of kid that thrived off of love.
I needed to be
told.
I needed to be shown.
Tom grew into a huge teenager who towered over his parents.
He looked like a big old country boy and that suited him fine.
All his life he would hide his intelligence and his education and speak
with a deep southern drawl.
He was happiest in the country, competing
in a rodeo or working in a horse barn.
Teenage girlsand not a few
grown women-watched Tom Allanson longingly from the rodeo stands.
His
jeans fit him like second skin, and he exuded masculinity.
One of the women was Liz Price, who would move in and out of his life
for years to come, and she laughed as she remembered knowing Tom.
"He
was my ideal man coming up.
A big rodeo star and-oh, how he fit those
jeans!
You hear about his jeans?
I thought he was God's gift to
women.
. . . One day I was walking across the horse show grounds with
a bucket of water in my hand, and somebody says, 'There goes Tom!"
and
I turned around, looking for him, and I ran right into a guy wire with
my neck and I poured all my water in my boots!"
Tom didn't know women looked at him that way.
He had had few
compliments in his life and his self-esteem was wrapped up only in his
skill with horses.
While he was still in high school, he learned to
shoe horses and worked as a farrier when he was only sixteen.
He had a
crush on Liz, who was a few years older than he.
But he never
mentioned it to her; he was much too shy.
"I won't say I was all that
good on my first horse or two," he remembered.
"Liz was my first
horseshoe customer and I like to ruined her horse."
After Tom graduated from the military academy, he enrolled in the
University of Georgia in Athens.
He played football; he was a line
coach's dream at six foot four and 250 pounds.
But he was forced to
drop out of football-and the university-in 1963 when a rodeo accident
ended his playing career.
He transferred to Truett McConnell Community
College and graduated with an associate degree in science.
Then he
returned to the University of Georgia.
Despite his father's vehement oppos't'on, Tom married for the first
time while he was in college.
He was mesmerized by a tall, slender,
raven-haired girl with clear blue eyes, Judy Van Meter.
"I fell in
love with this young girl up there in Athens," he said.
"She was
beautiful.
She looked absolutely beautifullike Lynda Carter, 'Wonder
Woman."You couldn't tell me anything as far as my parents goes.
I was
in love.
My dad said, 'You can't get married until you get through
with your college."
And I said, 'Well, you can't stop this love I've
got for this girl."
He said if I got married, they'd cut off all my
funds for college.
Well, I got married and he cut it off just like he
said he would.
There wasn't another penny.
So I had to make it on my
own."
Tom's marriage to Judy didn't work out.
"She had a champagne
appetite," Tom recalled ruefully.
"And I had a beer pocketbook.
I was trying to go to vet school and work, and she was working too.
She started playing games.
. . . If I didn't do what she wanted me to
do, there was no more sex."
He would later admit that it would be a
long time before he had good sense about women.
When his first wife shut the bedroom door on him, his eye soon wandered
to an even more unsuitable choice.
"YOU couldn't tell me anything
then-no more than you can tell any young man in love."
Tom's next love was, unfortunately, his wife's best friend, Carolyn
Brooks.
Carolyn was a delicate-appearing woman who swept her blond
hair back into a chignon.
"She looked like Grace Kelly," Tom said,
shaking his head.
"All my women were real pretty."
Carolyn was in her
twenties and also married-to a man almost fifteen years her senior.
"She gave me attention, and I wasn't getting that in my marriage," Tom
said.
"My wife was withholding sex and Carolyn was free with it.
We
started going to the Moose Club togetherand that was out of character
for me.
I didn't drink-never have."
Tom said Carolyn enjoyed dancing
and drinking, and it didn't concern him in the beginning.
Two divorce suits would be filed when Tom's wife and Carolyn's husband
discovered their romance.
Tom had yet to distinguish between love and
sex.
He believed that he had finally found what he was looking for and
that Carolyn would make a good wife as soon as their divorces were
final.
Despite his romantic misadventures, Tom managed to stay in college and
he graduated from the University of Georgia in 1966 with a bachelor of
science in agriculture, with emphasis on veterinary medicine.
He went
to work after graduation for the Beaver Dam Angus Farm in Colbert,
Georgia, near Athens, and stayed there for three years as cattle
manager over an eighteenhundred-head herd of Angus.
He then attended
Graham's School for Cattlemen and Horsemen in Garnett, Kansas, and was
certified to perform artificial insemination.
If Tom Allanson didn't understand women, he most definitely did know
orses.
He was now a farrier who specialized in "corrective shoeing"
and worked with quarter horses, thoroughbred Morgans, and Arabians.
By
this time, he had bred, trained, and shown quarter horses and Morgans
in halter, western, trail, reining, and fine harness classes.
He was
soon a judge in western horse shows.
He was a working fool.
Stripped
to his jeans and an undershirt to offset the heat of a Georgia summer
and the flames of his blacksmith rig on wheels, Tom was larger than
life.
His shoulders were ax-handle wide and his hugely bulging arms
matched those of any professional wrestler.
But, for all his physical
power, he was the gentlest of men, who truly believed the lyrics of
romantic country and western songs.
Given the right woman, he would have undoubtedly remained faithful for
fifty years.
But Tom had an uncanny talent for picking the wrong
woman.
Tom and his bride-to-be, who was soon called "Little Carolyn," were not
well matched.
He had a college degree and she had left school in tenth
grade.
He was noncombative and she had a fiery temper.
But Carolyn was
attractive and sexy, and Tom wanted so much to be married and create a
faihily of his own.
He married Carolyn with high hopes on October 25,