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
physical showed that her heart, lungs, blood, kidneys, and all other
systems were completely normal.
She had no blood clots.
Except for
the odd abscesses, she was in good health.
Pat received individual and group psychotherapy.
During her stay at
Metropolitan she demanded frequently to go to the Fulton County jail to
see her husband.
A week into her treatment she was allowed to visit
Tom with Boppo, and she "tolerated this short leave of absence well."
After twelve days in the clinic, Pat was discharged with a prescription
for fifty milligrams of Mellaril four times a day, the usual initial
dosage for treatment of borderline psychotic patients.
She was to be
followed as an outpatient and her doctors felt the chances were good
for "significant return of function."
Pat took the Mellaril for only a short time, but she doubled her intake
of her other prescriptions.
If the clinic doctors had picked up on her
growing dependence on sedative and painkilling drugs, they did not note
it in her records.
Once released from the Metropolitan Psychiatric Center, Pat seemed not
at all psychotic.
She didn't bother to continue psychiatric
counseling.
Her abscess had begun to heal while she was in the
hospital and, for a time, she looked much better.
But it was still
painful for her to walk up the long slope to visit Tom, so they worked
out a way to "be together" over the phone.
Besides sharing their love songs on the radio, they thumbed through the
7V Guide together and decided what they would watch.
That way, Pat explained, it would be almost as if they were really
together watching the same shows.
Pat quizzed Tom later to be sure he
had watched the shows they had selected.
Sometimes he had to fudge a
little; he couldn't always dictate which channel the jail TV would be
turned to.
Once he made the mistake of praising Farrah Fawcett
Majors's beauty when i she guested on her husband's show, The Six
Million Dollar Man.
"Tom!"
Pat sulked.
"I don't want to talk about her!
I want to talk
about us."
Summer came again to Atlanta.
Tom was still locked in the Fulton
County jail.
On July 8, 1975, exactly one year to the day oince his
arrival in that facility, his motion for a new trial, so long
postponed, was denied.
"Having given said amended motion due
consideration in the light of the arguments, the same is jwreby
overruled on each and every ground and a new trial is rued," Superior
Court Judge Charles Wofford decreed.
He also denied Tom's application for ball.
Pat had never hired a the* attorney.
Much to her chagrin, Ed Garland
assured Pat that he wasn't going to quit.
Getting Tom & new trial had
become a "personal vendetta" for him.
Having to deal with his client's
wife was a cross he bore stoically.
Tom wrote to his grandparents: I know the disappointing news of the
hearing was upsetting, but don't eat my steak.
I am going to be home
soon, and I can assure you I will devour it.
I am just so thankful
that my two women and you, Paw, are holding up out there for me.
I really have to commend Ma and Pat for being so strong.
It has been
so hard on both of them.
I guess it has been physical hardships on top
of all this mental strain that has been so rough.
I sure am glad you
and Ma love Pat and she loves the both of you so much.
I know she has
been a r al blessing and support to you and Ma.
She always seems to
gain strength from somewhere when Ma is upset and calms everything
down.
Paw, I really love that woman.
She is so wonderful.
In late July 1975, Pat Allanson called Bill Hamner, Paw Allanson's
attorney, and told him that the elder Allansons wished to add a second
codicil to their wills.
This codicil, dated August 1, removed Jean
Boggs completely as executor or trustee of her parents' wills, leaving
Pat and Tom Allanson as the sole executors.
If Tom were still
incarcerated at the time of the Allansons' deaths, then Pat alone would
distribute their assets.
Nona and Paw were deemed of sound mind, and they knew what they wanted
to do.
Nona was confined to bed much of the time, her speech was
garbled, and she had little use of one hand.
Paw took wonderful care
of her, lifting her tenderly and seeing that she was always well
groomed.
He was a good cook and in relatively good health for a man of
seventy-eight.
They could manage on their own, but they had come to
depend on Pat for backup.
Her presence was comforting.
Visits from
Pat and Debbie, and often Margureitte Radcliffe, brightened their
days.
There were errands to run and things difficult for Paw to do.
It was
hard for Pat too.
Her abscess was getting worse again.
Pat had long since stopped taking the Mellaril, although she was
receiving fifty milligrams of Demerol four times a day for the pain
from her abscess.
Demerol is a narcotic drug, and two hundred milligrams a day is a high
dosage for anyone to take regularly.
Demerol is not routinely
prescribed, anyway, for more than ten days for an outpatient.
To her doctors' consternation, Pat's abscess grew larger, deeper, and
more purulent during the summer.
They could find no reason for this,
save the possibility that she was simply a 14 poor healer."
Pat had to
use a wheelchair now when she came to visit Tom, and the jail
authorities allowed them to visit downstairs in the lawyers' cubicles
to save her the agonizing trip to the regular visiting area.
In September, Pat's abscess became an out-of-control volcano.
It was
as big as a fist, extending three or four inches down into her right
buttock.
The odor from the wound was nauseatingly putrid.
She was in
constant danger of going into septic shock from blood poisoning.
On September 12, Pat went to the Bolton Road Hospital in Atlanta.
She
complained of severe radiating pain and was no longer able to walk.
When physicians lifted the dressing from the open wound, they gasped.
The thing seemed to have a life of its own.
How could this slender
woman have stood the pain of such an angry-looking pus-filled lesion?
Pat was admitted to the hospital at once.
She would undoubtedly need
surgical intervention if she was to survive.
For years Pat had
complained to everyone who would listen that she was a sick woman, a
woman who was not long for this world.
And now that might be true.
The doctors at Bolton were puzzled as to
the cause of such a deep festering wound, especially when their patient
had been taking four capsules a day of the potent antibiotic Keflex.
Pat was released from the hospital but only on a temporary basis; she
was readmitted pending surgery two weeks later.
During this period she
sometimes appeared delusional.
She became fixated on religion.
Lying in her bed in her filmy
negligees, she would often rise up suddenly, point her finger at
whoever was visiting, and cry out, "May the Lord have mercy on your
soul!"
Other than that bizarre affectation, she seemed relatively
stable mentally.
Susan and Debbie, who were often at her bedside,
grimly compared their mother to Regan in The Exorcist.
" Pat had harassed Eastern Airlines until Susan was transferred f@from
Newark, New jersey, "for compassionate reasons."
She needed all of her
family nearby.
One evening that September, Susan was on call for Eastern, and she
planned to stay the night Alt the Tell Road farm because it was much
closer to the Hartsfield-Atlanta Airport than the Alfords' home in
Marietta.
She carried with her the uniform of an Eastern flight
attendant-a blue skirt, blue and white plaid blouse, and fitted red
vest with Id buttons and wings over her left breast.
"They called me in the afternoon for a flight," Susan recalled.
"And,
out of the blue, my mother decided she didn't want me to go.
I had my
uniform on and I was trying to get out the door when she came after me
with her crutch.
People never realized it, but my mother was physically very, very
strong.
She would get right up in your face, so close that it seemed
like she could walk right through you.
She had me backed up in a
corner, poking her crutch in my stomach, when Boppo showed up.
Papa
had called her.
Boppo could control Mom.
Boppo almost never got angry, but this was one of the times she did.
Mom let me go, but she'd accomplished what she wanted.
She wanted
Boppo to come home from work-and Boppo was there.
I missed my flight,
but I managed to make the next one and wasn't disciplined.
Susan recalled that her mother's behavior that summer became
increasingly assaultive.
Pat turned on her stepfather often.
She
never drew blood, but it was a frightening time.
The only person who
had any control over her was her mother; Margurif need be, Margureitte
could eitte could stare Pat down.
And, draw on a few histrionics
herself.
"If you keep this up, Pat, I'll kill myself......... Boppo would cry.
It was her final weapon.
That threat always worked.
Emotions were so
chaotic among the Radcliffe women that suicide threats were
omnipresent.
And they were all given to sporadic bouts of melancholy:
Susan, Debbie, Pat, of course, and eventually even Boppo Thorazine, a