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
minister.
The pastor and parishioners from the Westside Christian
Church often visited her parents and kept her informed of their
progress.
That way, she at least knew how they were.
She hurried to the hospital and visited her father.
Then she went to
her parents' home and found the doors padlocked.
When she asked
Margureitte-Radcliffe about the locks, she was told that her father
didn't want anyone inside-not even Jean.
Pat was handling all of Paw's
business matters.
jean was hurt to think that her parents would put a relative stranger
above her.
She had warned her father that he might be sorry for
putting his trust in other people, but he paid little attention to
her.
Now it was clear that both of her parents had somehow become totally
involved with Tom's wife and her parents.
Paw was a tough old bird, and Dr. Jones released him from the hospital
on February 113, four weeks after he was admitted.
He wanted to get
out so he could take Nona home again.
Paw was given a mild antianxiety
sedative, Vistaril, after the heart attack.
He used it only
occasionally.
But he knew he wasn't as strong as he had been, and it
was a good thing to have Tom's wife to spell him.
Pat wasn't well, and she reminded him of that often, so it impressed
him even more to see her with her cane, trying to help them, smiling
through her own pain.
jean Boggs was effectively shut out of her parents'life; Tom's letters
and Pat's continual warnings about jean had apparently convinced them
that she was greedy and that she didn't care about them at all.
Besides, they had Pat now.
When Nona was hospitalized with pneumonia in March, Jean went to see
her mother and found a note on the door barring all visitors except
"granddaughter [Pat] and Mr. Allanson."
jean was hurt, and she was
worried.
She had a sense of impending disaster, but nothing she could
really prove.
She asked her pastor to help her get through to her
parents, and she complained to Dr.
Jones.
Jones was well aware that there was dissension between jean and her
parents.
"I didn't make it my business to find out why," he said
later.
All Dr. Jones really knew was that Paw had insisted on several
occasions that the doctor was not to old to call Pat Allancall jean
Boggs in an emergency.
"I was t son."
jean was not needed on
Washington Road, although she kept trying to be with her parents.
She
visited them on Mother's Day in May 1976 and took a gift.
Nona barely
glanced at it and sniffed, "I already have one of those."
jean tried
to smile and said, "Well, now you have two."
At the time, she noted how well her father looked, how alert he was; he
was fully aware of current affairs.
He was the same ornery, closed-in
man she had always known, but it was not Paw who was shutting Jean out
so completely.
It was her mother.
Nona plainly didn't want her
there.
Theirs was a family in which estrangements were not uncommon, and
although Jean was still hurt, she still hoped and expected to make
things right with her parents.
Jean knew very little about her
parents'financial affairs, but she suspected that Pat and Tom might be
eating into their capital with their constant need for money for
lawyers, writs, and appeals.
There wasn't a thing Jean could do about it.
In the spring of 1976, Pat was out on Washington Road almost daily with
Nona and Paw; Debbie, her five-year-old daughter, Dawn, and Boppo and
Papa were often there too.
It was as if the elderly couple had had a
"family transplant"-just as Tom himself had had two and a half years
before.
As refined and ladylike as she was, Margureitte Radcliffe
seemed such a warm, selfless woman.
She bustled around Paw and Nona's
home, doing the things Pat couldn't do because she was on crutches.
And Pat.
Well, Pat was family.
On Thursday, June 10, 1976, Dr. Jones received a call from Pat.
She
was concerned because her husband's grandfather was vomiting almost
every evening-not a great deal, but she just wanted to be sure it
wasn't something serious.
Jones prescribed a mild antinausea
medication and had it delivered to the house.
The next morning, Pat called and said Paw was no longer vomiting, but
she was still worried.
"He hasn't been eating properly," she told
Jones's receptionist.
"And I guess I'd better tell you.
He's been
drinking a lot of homemade whiskey.
Both of them have been mixing up
their pills, putting them in different bottles and squirreling them
away.
You know how forgetful old people can get."
The two women
agreed that old people certainly could be like that, and that it could
also be dangerous.
When Dr. Jones took a look at the Allansons' charts, he was troubled
by Pat's comments about Paw Allanson and pills.
It was totally out of
character.
The old man fought taking pills.
Jones had to be firm with
him to get him to take his heart medication consistently.
He called
Pat.
"Wlat is Mr.
Allanson drinking?"
Jones asked.
"White lightning-over rock candy," Pat replied.
'rMite lightning over rock candy?"
the doctor asked, amazed.
Mr. Allanson had never been a drinker.
He had certainly plunged in
with a vengeance.
"He's into it again," Pat whispered, and Dr. Jones could hear
frustration in her voice.
He could not go over and snatch a drink
patient's hand, but he urged Pat to keep an eye on out of his Paw and
to watch that no medications were combined with the whiskey.
On Saturday morning, Pat was back on the phone to Dr.
Jones.
She said she and her parents had gone to Paw and Nona's home in
response to a desperate call from Nona.
No one answered their knocks
on the front door.
"We went around to the back of the house," Pat
said.
"We could see Paw in the back window, without a stitch of
clothes on.
He was just babbling and not making any sense, and he
wouldn't open the door for us to get in.
My father had to crawl
through a window to get in."
Pat felt that Paw had simply been hitting the white lightning again.
He wasn't sick; he was just drunk as a skunk.
Dr. Jones weighed
putting him in the hospital, but Saturday was a difficult r psychiatric
problems.
day for admitting patients with alcohol o He asked Pat if
Paw was eating, and she assured him that she had been able to get him
to eat a little, and that he was taking fluids well.
"Well," Dr. Jones said, "if someone can be there with him, to see that
the medications and the alcohol are out of his reach, he should be
feeling better in a matter of a couple of hours."
Pat said that she and her family would be glad to watch Paw and Nona.
She would personally search the house and get all the pills and put
them up high.
She would keep Paw away from the white lightning.
"Just let him rest.
Give him as much fluid as he'll take," Dr. Jones
advised.
"I'll call you back later and see how he's doing.
Dr. Jones did call back that Saturday afternoon and Pat said that Paw
was doing better.
He had had a nap, and something more to eat, and he
was taking fluids well.
She promised to stay all night with the old
couple.
If either one's condition weakened, she would call the doctor
at once.
At nine that evening-despite his vow to keep out of the Allanson family
feuds-Dr. Jones took it upon.
himself to call Jean Boggs.
He told
her that her father had had too much to drink and was sleeping it
off.
jean was baffled.
"No, that's not right," she exclaimed.
"My daddy
does not drink."
She offered to go over to her parents' house,
suggesting that Pat was some how behind this peculiar situation.
Dr.
Jones didn't think that was a good idea at all.
If Paw was sleeping
peacefully, he didn't need a confrontation between his daughter and his
"adopted" granddaughter-inlaw.
On Sunday morning, Dr. Jones and his family were preparing for church
around nine-thirty when the phone rang.
It was Pat.
"I went in to wake up Paw, and he seems to be
unconscious," she said.
"I can't get him to wake up."
Dr.
Jones told her he would be right over.
"It took me about ten minutes to get there," he later recalled.
Pat
let him in.
"I went to his bedroom and found him in bed, deeply comatose."
No one
was in the room with Paw, which struck Dr. Jones as odd when he saw
how desperately ill the patient was.
The old man was in such a deep coma that nothing his doctor did brought
him out of it-not shouting, shaking, or even pinching.
Paw had
secretions bubbling in the back of his throat and he was lying on his
back.
Dr. Jones was afraid he would aspirate the mucus into his
lungs, and he struggled to turn his heavy patient on his side.
Dr. Jones turned to ask Pat to call an ambulance to get Paw to the
hospital.
He had to do it himself; Pat was not in easy summoning
distance.
To the doctor's amazement, he found her in the bathroom
giving a sponge bath to Nona.
"It just seemed to be business as
usual," he said.
"While a man was lying in such bad shape in the other