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
story.
Pat and Tom, as Scarlett and Rhett in their antebellum finery,
smiled for the camera as they were united in marriage in a huge
flower-bedecked building: the lovely slender woman with feathers in her
hair and an ivory fan open in her small gloved hands, the huge man with
the tremendously proud grin.
Why Pat had pulled directly into the path of an oncoming car remained a
mystery.
She might have been blinded by the sun, but she was probably
only careless.
She was not a particularly good driver, and she was
easily distracted.
Driving a truck and pulling a horse trailer behind
cut most of her side and rear vision.
She may well have been exhausted
after three whirlwind days at the Stone Mountain horse show, but it was
an exhilarating fatigue; she had gone from being "left at the chapel"
to being a bride whose wedding was the focal point of the whole show.
It had turned out better than even she could have envisioned.
It was even kind of romantic that she and Tom had both suffered broken
collarbones-they shared everything.
His own injury was long since
healed, but Tom remembered how painful it had been, and he was
especially tender with Pat, never letting her lift anything heavy or
reach for something if he could get it for her.
Gradually, she resumed her riding lessons, and Tom divided his time
among his work at Ralston Purina, shoeing horses, and fixing up their
place.
As their fortunes increased, they planned to buy more and more
Morgan horses.
They would have the finest Morgan stables in the state
of Georgia.
They already had the finest marriage.
That, Tom was sure
of.
"Two human souls joined together for life .
. ."
There was only one cloud over their happiness.
While Pat's family was
pleased with her marriage to Tom, and Tom's grandparents found Pat a
sweet and thoughtful woman, his parents were another story entirely.
Walter and Big Carolyn Allanson wanted nothing to do with Tom's third
wife.
In fact, they had sided with Tom's exwife during the divorce,
and resisted all his efforts to let them see what a fine woman Pat
was.
Hoping to ease the situation a little, Margureitte Radcliffe made
overtures to the Walter Allansons.
She called and invited them to join
her and Colonel Radcliffe for dinner at the officers' club at Fort
McPherson.
"They were not interested," Margureitte later said, "and I
thought, How can they not be interested when they do not know us?"
Margureitte, who always prided herself on her sense of propriety and
her impeccable social grace, was shocked to find Tom's parents so
hostile.
Using a phrase she often sprinkled through her conversations,
she sighed, "I never in this whole wide world thought people could act
like that."
Then Tom lost his job at Ralston Purina, and he suspected it was his
father's fine hand interfering in that too.
He tried to make up for
his lost salary with his blacksmith work, but that caused a bit of a
problem in his relationship with Pat He was surprised to find that his
bride was not only jealous of his exwife, she was jealous of any woman
who might cast an appreciative eye on him.
She plain didn't want him
around other women, not unless she was with him.
He tried to explain
to her that horse barns were not exactly prime spots to find other
women and that he spent 95 percent of his life around men, but it did
no good.
Pat insisted on accompanying Tom on his farrier rounds.
He was proud of her, but she sure put a damper on male conversation.
Instead of jawing easily with the good old boys who hung around as he
shod horses, Tom worried whether Pat was comfortable and feeling
okay.
Her presence made his customers uneasy too.
But he loved her too much
to ever feel smothered by her attention.
If she wanted to be with him,
then she was always welcome.
He wouldn't have dreamed of telling her to stay home.
Lavished with Tom's love, Pat's health improved-at least enough so she
was able to help on the elaborate grounds of Kentwood; she could manage
the riding mower.
She gave a few horseback lessons, and they sometimes
rented their surrey or the sulky and their horses for shows and
parades.
She and Tom went often to horse shows.
But they both soon
realized that they would have to budget tightly and worle harder to
make Kentwood the kind of place they visualized.
Pat wanted everything
now, and Tom had to gentle her down and explain they Just couldn't
afford all thata bigger barn, a grandstand for horse shows, more roses,
chandeliers, more horses and more buggies, more elegant livery for
their drivers.
All of it took money, and the money would have to come from somewhere
outside their household.
Without his job at Ralston Purina and with
the broken collarbone that had kept him from shoeing horses for a
couple of months, Tom had lost ground financially.
Now he could work,
but his blacksmith business was going downhill instead of up-mostly
because of Pat's insistence that she always be present, or because he
so often had to drop everything and rush home when she had a spell of
fainting.
Tom could never tell when Pat was going to pass out.
Sometimes she
would be driving their jeep around the place and she would just faint
at the wheel and fall out the driver's door; sometimes he would race
home to find her lying by the telephone.
No, it was impossible to even think of Pat working fulltime; he didn't
want her to do that anyway.
He wasn't even sure she should be giving
so many riding lessons.
Tom wanted to get his grandparents moved onto the place too.
He had promised to do that, and that promise, he thought, should be
honored before the big expansion of Kentwood.
But even with worries
about money and feuds with his parents, Tom was happy.
When he and Pat saddled up their horses and rode over their own land,
he thought he was probably the luckiest man who had ever lived.
Sometimes Pat wore one of her costumes for a ride around their place,
and the sight of her with the burgeoning spring trees behind her was
enough to make him want to weep with joy.
They called each other
"Sugar" and eventually that was abbreviated to "Shug."
They had
special songs and little sayings that were just for them to know
about.
"First things first, Shug," they would say.
They would see to what was
important and the rest of their plans would fall into line.
Tom had never told Pat how bad things were with his parents especially
with his father.
Walter Allanson could have a crude mouth, and he had
used it to talk about Pat.
Although he had never met her, his father
detested Pat.
When Tom was first living with her, he had told his son
she was a slut, a woman whose bad reputation was common knowledge.
"She'll lie down with any man with a truck and a horse trailer.
You
damn fool, can't you see that?"
Pat had had affairs that were no secret, Walter Allanson had pointed
out.
If Tom had anything to do with her, he was a bigger idiot than he
had already proved he was.
"Stay away from that, Tommy," Walter had
argued.
"That's bad stuff there."
Of course, his father's warnings had only made Tom want Pat more.
It
wasn't true what he said about Pat; Tom didn't believe a word of it.
That was his father's way of ruining things for him, the way he always
had managed to tarnish those things that meant the most to him.
Pat
would be heartsick if she heard what Walter Allanson had said about
her, and Tom wasn't ever going to tell her.
It was difficult though, because Pat kept urging Tom to make peace with
his family.
She suspected-correctly-that there was money in Tom's
family, even though-except for his aunt jean Boggs, Walter's
sister-they lived rather austerely.
Tom had told her that Paw was
shrewd and had hidden money stashes all over his place on Washington
Road.
The way Pat understood it, Paw had sold the back part of his land to
Tom's father, and Walter had seen to getting it zoned for
multidwellings, then sold it to builders who had put up the Forest
Apartments, the Gray Estates, and the Club Candlewood Apartments.
There had to have been a great deal of money coming into the family
from those transactions.
Tom didn't seem to care a hoot about it, but
he was the Allansons' only son, and Paw and Nona's favorite grandson,
and eventually, she figured, it would all belong to him.
Heaven knows
they were never going to make Kentwood what it should be if Tom didn't
get his rightful inheritance.
Tom's aunt jean Boggs and her husband, Homer, had a fine house in East
Point and she dressed as if she were a wealthy woman.
Tom told Pat
that Jean hadn't had anything to do with her brother Walter after some
fuss over their father's property-not for seven or eight years.
She
had children too, but they hadn't been raised by the elder Allansons,
the way Tom was; he was almost like Paw and Nona's own son.
Now that she and Tom were married, Pat was sure Walter and Big Carolyn
Allanson would accept her.
She came from the Silers on her mother's
side, a fine old family.
She had parents to be proud of-Papa was,
after all, a retired colonel.
Pat considered herself far superior to
Tom's ex.
She was a lady, whose children were riding champions, a lady
who had met Governor Jimmy Carter and the Japanese royal family
personally.
The Allansons had to recognize that and be grateful that
she had married their son.
It would all work out.
Tom wasn't optimistic about that happening anytime soon.
He knew how