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
didn't know it was unloaded, he gingerly removed the gun from her grip
and she handed the phone to him.
"Please talk to my son and reassure
him that you're here with me."
After.
Riggins spoke to Ronnie and hung up the phone, he was assaulted
with a torrent of words as Pat told him how horrified she had been to
see her own father-in-law standing there in the hedgerow waving his
private parts at her.
"I've been ill," she told Sheriff Riggins.
"I
have a lot of trouble with blood clotting, and what have you, and I
have to have oxygen.
I have high blood pressure and all from an
accident I was in-I just got out of the hospital.
This was the first
day I felt well enough to mow.
"My son said for me to ask you to load the gun for me, so I'll have
something to protect myself after you leave-at least until my husband
gets home."
"Where are the shells for this .22?"
Riggins asked.
"I don't know."
Tom called back just then and told Riggins where the keys to the gun
cabinet were.
The deputy chambered the rounds and showed Pat how to
shoot the gun.
She wasn't unkno*ledgeable about guns.
She could load
and shoot a .22 rifle, and she had used a much more powerful gun when
she went deer hunting with Tom the previous fall.
But she was
apparently too frightened to think straight, and her hands shook.
Riggins noted that she also seemed terribly embarrassed, and, hell,
what woman wouldn't be?
It was a humiliating thing to have to turn in
your own kin for showing off his privates.
It wasn't natural.
"Can you describe the man you saw?"
he asked.
"Yes," she began slowly.
"Of course-I mean I knew it was his father.
. .
. There he stood wearing that same kind of hat that he wears, that kind
of floppy hat, and his shirtsleeves rolled up like he does, and just
dropping his pants.
Yet at the same time I was thinking, How could it
be his father?
You know?
But I know it was him."
The Pike County deputy managed to calm Pat down and suggested that she
talk with her husband about whether they 99 wanted to bring charges
against his father.
Pat seemed composed enough when he had to leave on
another call.
This was, in fact, Riggins's second visit to Kentwood Morgan Farm.
In
early April, Tom Allanson had called him to report that somebody had
shot one of his cars full of .22 bullet holes.
The car was parked out
in back of the barn, and it looked as if somebody had used it for
target practice.
Riggins had never been able to pin the shooting on a
suspect, and Tom had had no suggestions.
There were a lot of visitors
coming and going at Kentwood, and then there was fifteen-year-old
Ronnie Taylor living there with his mother and stepfather, and from
time to time his teenage friends.
But this time a suspect had been
positively identified.
When Tom got home a few minutes after Riggins left, he listened in icy
shock to Pat's accusations against his father.
His father was a mean
SOB on occasion, but Tom couldn't even imagine Walter Allanson as an
exposer.
His father was much too controlled to do such a thing, or had
always seemed so to Tom.
Still, his dad had done about everything else he could to make their
lives miserable.
Tom called his father's law offices and no one answered.
His life
seemed to be spinning out of control.
It was one thing to have his
father angry with him.
Lord knew he was used to it.
But every day
brought some new shock.
Margureitte had told him his father didn't care if he lived or died and
wouldn't even spit on his grave if he did.
His father had accused him
of putting poison in his own baby's milk and of stealing guns from
him.
And Pat believed his father had ruined him in the job market, and would
actually kill him if he got the chance.
That was exactly what he had
told Mrs.
Radcliffe.
Even Nona and Paw had warned Tom that he might be in danger.
But this.
His father had done the unforgivable.
Walter Allanson, an
attorney at law, candidate for judge, had exposed himself to his
wife.
Tom was enraged.
Poor Pat was so sick she could barely move, her
collarbone hurt her all the time, and still she had been out there
trying to help by mowing the lawn.
How dare his father frighten and
shock her that way?
It made Tom realize that Pat had been right; he couldn't let his father
get away with it.
Neither of them could stand for such shabby
treatment.
As much as he dreaded the prospect, Tom knew that he would
have to confront his father.
Walter O'Neal Allanson and his wife, Milford-but called Carolynwere
both fifty-one in late June of 1974.
They had been married for
thirty-two years, more than half of their lives.
They lived in East
Point, a gracious suburb adjacent to Atlanta's southwest border.
Theirs was by all accounts a comfortable marriage, although some said
that Walter had strayed a bit in his forties.
If he had, Carolyn had let it go.
The woman involved was long dead.
In his fifties, Walter Allanson had grown almost puritan in his
opinions about the sanctity of marriage, as virtuous as a reformed
hooker.
If there were children involved, he was inflexibly against
divorce-a sometimes difficult stance for an attorney whose practice was
general law.
Walter was a handsome man with iron gray hair and clear bluegray eyes,
a compactly trim man-save for a slight falling away of his chin line as
he moved through middle age.
"Big Carolyn" was a plain woman who
rarely wore makeup.
Her hair was brown and combed back from her face
into nondescript waves.
She was neither slender nor fat; rather, her
figure was full breasted and solid.
The months ahead promised to be as challenging and exciting as any in
the Allansons' lives, ever since Walter had announced his candidacy for
a civil judgeship.
He had a good reputation, and there was every
reason to think he would win in the fall elections.
Carolyn truly
enjoyed her job as a nurse in a local doctor's office, but both she and
Walter came home for lunch every day.
They were always together.
If
the early fire had gone out of their relationship, they were
companionable.
Walter came from simple people, uneducated but with native
intelligence.
His childhood had been hardscrabble, and.
it was
important to him to have money against tomorrow's uncertainties.
He was shrewd when it came to real estate.
He had bought the house at
1458 Norman Berry Drive in East Point for a good price.
The neighborhood was prime then, with Norriian Berry Drive a pleasant
boulevard divided by a green strip of young trees and shrubbery in its
center island.
Russell High School, Walter's alma mater, was almost
directly across Norman Berry.
The house was built in the.
forties of dun-colored brick and white
siding with peaked dormers.
It was a solid house, set on a plateau so
high above Norman Berry Drive that a man could get winded just walking
up the driveway.
Oaks, pines, laurel hedges, and rhododendrons grew
thick, shutting out the noise of the street below and separating the
Allanson house from neighboring properties.
Carolyn's mother-"Mae Mama" Lawrence-owned the property to the west of
them, but you could hardly see her house through the foliage between
them.
Walter planted a grape arbor out back, and it thrived.
He laid
down a strip of concrete smac dab in the middle of the backyard so he
could turn around and not have to back up the 194 feet to the street.
It didn't add much aesthetically to the yard but it was practical.
And
Walter Allanson, if anything, was a most practical man.
His pragmatic view of life had cost him any relationship with his
sister jean, even though she and her husband lived only a few blocks
away.
And now his rigid moral views had shut his son out too.
Walter
detested Pat, and he would far rather lose Tom than bend even a little
toward his new wife.
Walter didn't need anyone in his life who
questioned his authority.
Tom had known that since he was a little
boy.
A number of people had reason to resent a man like Walter Allanson.
Lawyers make enemies, often unaware.
Over the :E years, he had
represented the usual assortment of clients who felt they hadn't been
given proper attention.
But Walter didn't run scared.
He had always
considered himself fully capable of defending himself.
Still, his
partner, Al Roberts, his law clerk, and his secretary had noticed that
he was jumpy and tense in the last weeks of June 1974-not at all like
himself.
On Saturday, June 29, 1974, Carolyn and Walter Allanson left the house
on Norman Berry Drive a little after nine, driving their 1963 white
Ford station wagon.
Walter wanted to check on one of his real estate
purchases.
It was a beautiful morning, with only the edges of the day
betraying the heat to come, and they headed northeast of Atlanta toward
Lake Lanier in Forsyth County, where Walter had picked up a piece of
waterfront property.
There were no buildings on it yet, but the land s
and earround homes.
He and Tommy had built a good boat dock up
there.