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
called me yesterday morning to tell me.
She was hysterical -she couldn't tell me anything.
. . . I told her to
stay calm."
Pat had been confined either to bed or to a wheelchair, but with the
news of Paw's coronary she was suddenly up and about.
Almost miraculously, she was able to drive again.
She needed a cane to
walk, but she was in the hospital visiting Paw, seeing to Nona in the
rest home and then in South Fulton where she had been placed
temporarily, and generally taking over all their affairs.
She refused to let their own daughter, Jean Boggs, have any say in
their care.
On February 4, 1976, there was a third and final codicil to the elder
Allansons' wills.
This time, the codicil was far more intricate, but
when the details were winnowed out, their daughter jean Boggs had been
completely excluded from inheriting, and Tom had become his
grandparents' principal heir.
If Tom should predecease Pat, she, as
his wife, would inherit almost everything the Allansons owned.
When it was decided that Paw could go home, it was Pat who insisted on
being there for Paw and Nona almost every day.
She was the liaison
between Paw and his attorney.
She was the only one who could translate
Nona's garbled speech.
Pat Allanson was the indispensable woman.
It looked as though Tom was going to Jackson Prison and there wasn't a
thing in the world to stop it.
Even though his case was being appealed
to the Supreme Court, he would have to !await the justices' decision in
prison.
Pat had warned him that he might have to go to Reidsville
Prison, "where men died all the time."
In comparison, Jackson
Diagnostic Center was preferable by far.
Pat's whole when had become one of bitter acceptance.
She bombarded
Tom with negative thoughts.
They both might as well be dead.
Every
time he tried to inject hope into their phone conversations, she
deflected it.
"I'm trying to explain to you that I don't have anything
to live for," she sighed.
"Oh you don't?"
"That's what I can't make you understand."
"You know better, Shug," Tom said, trying to soothe her.
"You just said you've been trying to find something that is important
to keep me interested in doing something," she replied softly.
"But
don't you understand the only thing that is important to me is you?"
"I know, darling-but I can't come home right now.
So what am I gonna
do in the meantime?"
"You can't come home period," she countered.
"You really know that is true, don't you?"
"All I know 's that you've been sentenced to two life sentences and
that is a fact," Pat said, her voice suddenly harsh.
see you want to argue about this, and we're not ever gonna get
anywhere."
Tom's voice dropped hopelessly.
"I don't have any reason to live," Pat said.
"You are the only reason
I have to live.
You said life is being concerned with the things that
we can feel and touch.
We can't feel or touch or see each other."
"Pat, you know what I'm talking about-" "It's nice to hear you talk
about things that you know we can never do," Pat whispered
sarcastically.
"Like going to other countries or different places.
.
. . I have a right to tell you how I feel."
"Every conversation, every letter, you talk about the very same
thing-about you not wanting to get well, not wanting to live."
Tom's
voice wasn't angry; he was pleading with his wife to keep trying.
"Are you telling me that you are with me and taking care of me and
looking after me and all that?"
Pat began to sob.
"I just know I
can't feel you because I can't touch you.
You act like I can feel
you-but I can't.
I know you love me and 'that's all that matters."
See, Tom-you talk about our life later, but that's going to be your
life."
"You agree with the part when I said that you're young and still
living?"
"Will you talk that way fifteen years from now?"
"Pat.
You'll be here thirty years from now."
"Not without you, I can't.
Oh, I can do anything with you, but I can't
exist without you."
Behind Tom, the sounds of caged men reverberated against the walls.
It
took tremendous effort for him to maintain a calm voice, as if he were
talking to a child, willing her to live.
"How am I going to support myself?"
Pat cried.
"How am I going to
live?"
Tom was finally defeated.
"I don't know."
It was true, he didn't.
He was locked up, with no real hope of being
outside prison walls for the next decade.
Tom tried to tell Pat she
could get her horse business back together again.
She was still living with her parents; she had a roof over her head and
food to eat.
She wasn't a destitute teenager.
She was almost
thirty-nine, and her parents still stood firmly behind her.
"You know you are going to prison, Tom," she accused, as if he were
choosing to be in prison.
I'm coming home," he promised.
"You may be home in ten or twelve years, Tom but you won't be coming
home to me."
I'm coming home to you.
I just hope you'll be there."
One theme and one theme alone began to emerge when Pat talked with her
husband as he waited to go on the chain to Jackson Prison.
Tom was
going away and it would kill her.
He might as well accept it; she
could not live without him.
If he @,over wanted to be with her again,
and he assured her he did, it would have to be in some other, better
world.
In death, they might be together; in life, they no longer had
any hope at all.
"Shug, you don't know what happens after we die, and neither do I," Tom
argued.
She blamed herself.
"I wish you could understand how terrible I feel
because you're there and I know it is my fault."
Pat had never before alluded to the possibility that she had any fault
in Tom's alleged crimes-not in their private conversations; certainly
not to Tom's attorneys.
But Tom wouldn't let her think about feeling
guilty.
He didn't blame her for any of this.
He had hope for his
appeal.
"Our lives are dwindling away," Pat cried.
She told him that she was
fighting his own lawyers to try to keep him close to her.
"Pat, you're not physically able to do that."
"It's the most important thing in our lives.
Tom, what good is it if
you're gone?"
"Don't you think I'm ever coming home?
.
. . I'm coming home to you,
Pat.
I promise you.
. . . We'll start over and we'll make it okay."
"I won't even be walking by the time you come home.
I won't be much
good for anything but companionship."
You're good for everything.
You're good for being my wife, you're good
for being my Pat.
You're my lover.
You're my super kind of woman.
.
. . Age doesn't have a thing to do with it.
. . . It doesn't make any difference as far as my love goes whether
you're in a wheelchair or you're up running around."
"Are you going to be able to say that twelve years from now?"
sure
am.
"I won't live that long in a wheelchair."
Pat always used the wheelchair when she visited Tom, even though she
could have gotten by with a cane.
The wheelchair meant they would be
allowed to meet in the attorneys' cubicles on the second floor, where
they could have some contact.
Tom didn't realize that Pat could get
around just fine with a cane, or that she had no trouble driving her
own car.
During her visits, Pat continued to chip away at Tom's belief in the
future.
When he was down, she pulled him further into the pit of
despair.
Again and again she told him her own death was imminent.
She
talked of their perfect love, now broken and hopeless with prison bars
about to separate them.
There was only one way they would ever be
together.
They would both have to be dead.
Man and the law were going
to keep them apart.
Tom didn't really take her seriously; it sounded like more of her
depression.
Pat had always been consumed with an almost unnatural curiosity about
what jail was like for Tom.
She questioned him continually about what
he thought, who shared his cell, what they talked about, and she
focused most intently on humiliations he might have suffered,
reinforcing those embarrassments in the process.
Even locked away from
her, he had no privacy with his own thoughts.
To his chagrin, she
asked him if he masturbated, phrasing it obliquely: "Do you do-you
know-what men do in prison when they're locked away from their women?
You know what I mean?"
"Pat!"
Tom barked into the phone.
"No.
Don't ask things like that.
Pat quizzed him about "the chain," and about the strip searches he
would endure, commenting how humiliating they would be for him.
She