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
remained crystalline in her mind ever after.
"Mr. Allanson," she
said.
"I didn't want to corner and see you, but I had to come .
. . because
I've tried to have you all meet us.
I couldn't believe all the things
I've heard-that you were a stern man and a hard man-and I just can't
believe any father could be like that.
. . . Tommy's not said
anything, but I can see his heart has to be breaking inside from the
attitude that you and his mother have with him.........
Walter Allanson was hardly cowed by the indignant words of the woman
before him.
"Mrs. Radcliffe," he said ominously.
"Let me tell you
something.
I'm Scotch, I'm a strict disciplinarian, and I'm a stern
man.
I have schooled myself that when I'm finished with someone, I'm
finished with them.
I don't have a son.
"Mr.
Allanson," Margureitte said, "you don't mean that.
11 Deep down inside you, this is some kind of front that' t you are
putting on.
Deep down inside you, you have to have some feeling.
',
"No, Mrs. Radcliffe, I do not.
. . . If Tommy would drop dead today,
I would not go to his funeral, and if he was dying and would ever call
me, I would not lift a finger to help him.
In fact, I would do
everything I can to ruin him."
"Mr.
Allanson!
Have you always felt this way about him?"
"No.
About a year ago, he changed.
I think the boy has a tumor."
Margureitte drew herself up.
"Well, if I thought a child of mine had a
tumor, rather than accusing him of things, I think I'd do everything I
could to persuade him to seek the proper medical advice."
"He won't pay any attention to me," Walter Allanson said.
Then he
mentioned the formaldehyde in the baby's milk again, and added that Tom
had also put sugar in the gas tank of his car on May 9.
"That couldn't be," Margureitte countered.
"Tom was in Stone Mountain
getting married on that day; there were at least three hundred people
at his wedding.
Really and truly, Mr. Allanson, you must have
something back in your cases and you should be looking there instead of
thinking that everything that happens is Tommy's fault."
"Well," Allanson said, leaning across his desk and glaring at
Margureitte, "I want to tell you what he did, Yesterday morning,
sometime between nine A.m.
and one-thirty P.m someone broke into our house and stole three
guns."
Walter Allanson wanted the weapons back and he instructed Margureitte
to have Tom mail them to him.
"He's not to come and bring them to me,
because I'll kill him when I see him.
If he doesn't mail them to me,
or the police department doesn't make the case against him, then I'll
get him."
Margureitte blanched.
"Mr Allanson, you can't mean that.
. . . Even
though your son hasn't done anything to you?
If he came to you and
said, 'Dad, I don't know what this is about, but can't we sit down and
talk it over and let bygones-let it be over with,' Mr. Allanson, you
couldn't forgive your son?"
"No.
I'm finished.
I don't have a son.
I don't have a daughterin-law
either.
Your daughter is not my daughter-in-law."
Her face stiff with horror, Margureitte Radcliffe left Walter W,
Allanson's office.
Her visit had only made things worse.
EveryU", one in the family felt it.
The atmosphere at Kentwood in late
June was thick with tension.
Liz Price, an old friend of Tom's and a horse show acquaintance of
Pat's, owned a farm seven miles south of Kentwood.
Her daughter,
johnette, exercised their horses three or four days a week and
occasionally rode the Morgans in shows.
Liz was present when Tom
walked into the kitchen one evening with an onion from the garden and
presented it to Pat with a flourish.
Liz was surprised to see Pat
frown and brush his hand away fretfully.
"She was always fussing at
him," Liz recalled.
Pat's daughter, Susan Alford, who was twenty-one that summer and often
came out to Kentwood with her baby son, Sean, had always been able to
gauge her mother's moods; she saw that Pat was strung out to a fine
thread.
She picked at Tom for having no backbone.
She demanded that
he defend her honor, go to his parents andforce them to welcome her
into the family circle as his wife.
Susan saw that Tom was so completely smitten with Pat that he would do
anything to please her, at least anything within his power.
But Tom knew he had no power at all with his father.
He never had.
Pat's aunt Alma rocked on the porch glider one velvet night in June,
but she couldn't relax.
"I can't put my finger on it," she commented
to Liz Price, "but something bad's fixing to happen.)$ .
. .
On June 28, Pat was alone at Kentwood.
Tom had gone over to
Barnesville to shoe horses, and Ronnie had said he would be in Zebulon
on a painting job.
It was a glorious sunny day and Pat was finally feeling well enough to
do a little more work around the place.
She got out the riding mower
to cut the grass.
In a statement she later gave to a Pike County
deputy, she described the terror she had endured that afternoon.
I was there by myself and we have a great big huge yard; we have
fifty-something acres there .
. . and I was cutting way up the very
front part of the road-which is a long way from the house.
I was on
the small riding mower and I was just nonchalantly cutting around.
I
had just started cutting .
. . a I nd I saw a truck go by.
It looked
just like our truck, a blue camper truck.
I knew it wasn't ours
because the camper top was off.
. .
. You know how something just goes through your mind and it just sort
of sticks?
I went on around-it was a good acre-and there is a big tall
hedgerow about fourteen feet high between our farm and the field next
to us and .
. . I could see the top of a camper.
I thought, Well, gee, that man must have had trouble with his truck.
.
. . And all of a sudden I got right at the end of the hedgerow where we
have a great big tall tree.
And there he stood.
Sleeves rolled up, and he just dropped his pants.
. . . I didn't know
what to do.
I slammed the brakes on the tractor and it seemed like I
was frozen for an hour, but I know it wasn't but a second."
Pat told the deputy the most shocking part of her ordeal.
She recognized the man.
She had seen him for years around East Point,
and lately his picture had been in all the papers and on political
signs.
The man who had exposed himself to her was Walter Allanson, her
husband's father!
"I was sure it was him.
The only thing that threw me offthere was a
cigar in the man's mouth.
. . . I had never seen his daddy smoke a
cigar.
. . . I have never seen him with anything except a cigarette in
his mouth.
. . . I slammed the tractor into third gear.
It doesn't go
very fast.
I headed across to go to the neighbors next door, and there
were no cars over there, so I headed back up my long, winding driveway
and another acre to get back to the house.
I ran straight into the
house."
Tom always kept his "shoeing book" right there in the house so that Pat
would know exactly where he was all the time in case she had a "sinking
spell."
Pat hadn't called the sheriff first; she called Tom.
She was
in such a panic that he could barely understand her, but then she
blurted out that his father had stood right out there in their hedgerow
and exposed his penis to her.
Tom could scarcely take in what she was saying, but one thing was
certain-she was hysterical.
"He said, 'Shug, for crying out loud, stop
and hang up the phone and call the sheriff!"
And Pat had done just
that.
The sheriff told her he was on his way, and before Pat could
dial again, the phone rang.
It was Ronnie, calling from Atlanta, where
he was visiting Margureitte.
She was so frightened that she really wasn't sure where Ronnie was, she
told the sheriff later.
She had thought he was in ZebuIon painting a
house.
But then, who knew where Ronnie was half the time?
He and his friend,
Cecil "Rocky" Kenway-who often stayed at Kentwood with him-were like
most teenagers, taking off for God knows where whenever they pleased.
Ronnie told his mother that he had had a sudden presentiment about
her.
"Mom, I don't know why-I just wanted to call and see if everything's
all right."
Pat began to tell her son what had happened, when Ronnie stopped her
and said, "Mother, are the doors locked?"
"Oh, my God, I don't know.
Wait a minute.
I'll call you back.
She set the phone down and ran to lock all the doors in the house, but
then she was struck with a terrible thought: Oh my God, what if I've
locked him in the house with me?
He could have come up the hedgerow
that lines the back of the house....
Ronnie held on the line until Pike County's chief deputy sheriff, Billy
Riggins, raced the two and a half miles from the courthouse in Zebulon
to Kentwood.
Riggins found an attractive but hysterical woman standing
at the kitchen phone, clutching an unloaded .22 rifle.
Since Riggins