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
proved that she had not had an appointment to see anyone, and records
showed that she hadn't had her collarbone X-rayed as she had claimed.
To the best of the nurse's recollection, Pat had merely come into the
office, greeted the staff at the desk, and left.
She had been seen,
Stoop thought.
She had made damn sure she had been seen by
witnesses.
Stoop read and reread the old Allanson case, completely absorbed.
He
had little doubt that Tom Allanson had been in that basement on the
evening of the shooting, but he wondered who had cut the phone line and
pulled the circuit breaker.
He wondered how the gun had happened to be
in the "hole" in the basement, and he was particularly intrigued by the
ubiquitous Pat.
She had been as close to the site of the double murders as next door,
she had circled the block in her jeep, and she had bought fried chicken
to go and waited with it and her Fourth of July costume, sewing in a
darkening parking lot just a block down Norman Berry Drive.
But she
had claimed that she never saw Tom that day after he let her off at the
doctor's office.
What, Stoop asked himself, would Pat have had to gain if her in-laws
were dead?
And, taking it a step further, what would she have gained
if her bridegroom perished in a gunfire storm too?
Zebulon The Allansons had disinherited their son, but Pat had never
believed that.
She had always been convinced that Tom, as their only
child, was their true heir.
After all, her parents had forgiven her
everything.
She could not have even imagined parents who didn't
sacrifice for their young.
She had to have believed that Boppo and
Papa's martyrdom was the way things were in all families.
And, if she
labored under the premise that Tom would inherit everything Walter and
Carolyn Allanson had, she would naturally have believed that she, as
Tom's wife, was Tom's heir and would inherit whatever came to him.
There had been the huge mortgage on Zebulon, with balloon payments
looming on the near horizon.
A wealthy widow could handle all of
that.
There was another sorry thing to consider, especially after Stoop had
heard Tom pledge his love and devotion on fifteen tapes to a whiny,
manipulative woman whom most men would have long since grown weary
of.
Pat was rumored to have been bored with him within weeks of their Gone
With the Wind wedding.
Susan remembered her mother's growing
disinterest well.
Pat had dodged being alone with Tom.
Instead of
joining him in bed, she had sat on the swing with her aunt.
It was
only after he was arrested that she had become the complete tragic
heroine, pining and mourning for her lover.
Stoop suspected Pat would
have been just as happy-probably happier, and certainly less
apprehensive-if she could have mourned Tom in widow's weeds.
of
course.
Stoop had He grimaced.
Victo?ian widow's weeds, grown to know
the lady's preferences and obsessions all too well.
Maybe she even supposed that if she had Zebulon paid off, and if she
were a widow, then Hap Brown would leave his wife and come back to her
with his hat in his hands.
There was only one other person alive who would know what had actually
happened in and around the Allanson home on Norman Berry Drive on July
3, 1974.
And that was Tom Allanson.
With the assistance of Tom's parole officer, Don Stoop and Michelle
Berry met with Tom Allanson in the Canton office of the Georgia Board
of Prisons and Paroles.
Legally, Tom no longer had anything to fear.
No matter what had happened on his parents' murders, he had paid with
fifteen and a the night of half years of his life.
He could not npw be
put in double 'jeopardy.
He could never be tried again for those
shootings.
He didn't, have to talk with the D.A."s investigators, and
they wouldn't have blamed him much if he had refused, or if he was
annoyed at the intrusion into his new life.
But he had agreed to be
interviewed.
They had seen pictures of a young Tom, and this giant of a man seemed
not so different older, but not as old as they knew he was.
He was
almost fifty now, but he had scarcely any gray in his hair and his arms
were muscular and tanned.
If he was not pleased to be called in to talk about the woman who had
carved a big chunk out of his life, he was, at least, obliging.
He
reached out his massive hand to shake with Don Stoop.
Stoop probably knew the story of Tom and Pat as well as anyone did
now.
He had immersed himself in their lives-from the first interviews with
Susan and Bill Alford, the voluminou court transcripts of trials and
appeals, newspaper clippings, the endless Pat-and-Tom tapes, from
talking with Andy Weathers, and from Michelle Berry's interviews with
Jean Boggs.
So many of the players in the old script had told their
stories, and at first, the whole scenario had seemed too incredible to
be real.
Now, Stoop felt as if he had known the story all his life.
He threw out a few questions to hear it again, this time from Tom's
angle.
Stoop wondered if even now, even after all Pat had done to him,
Tom could somehow still be attached to the woman he had loved so
desperately, the woman he had sworn to stand by until death -but not,
Stoop reminded himself, enough to commit suicide for.
His first questions were about how they had met.
The answers were
familiar and came in single sentences.
Tom obviously didn't remember
dates.
He admitted he had been obsessed with marrying Pat all those years
ago.
"I don't know if she wanted to marry me or not," he said.
"I was the
most insistent one.
She kept telling me, 'No, you don't want to marry
me."And I wish I hadn't.
. . . My head wasn't screwed on right at the
time."
Stoop didn't comment.
Pat had known her quarry well.
She knew exactly
how much demurring it would take to reel Tom in.
"This is going to be a hard question," Stoop said, easing into the meat
of what he wanted to know, "but I need you to think and answer as
precisely and factually as you can.
We need to know, what was Pat's
involvement with you in the 1974 murder case?
I'm talking about what
started it, what led up to it, what transpired during the trial, and
after the trial while you were in jail.
"That is a hard one to answer," Tom began.
"My parents did not like
Pat from the very beginning....... She wasn't the reason for the
divorce.
She was the outcome....... She hated my parents and they
hated her."
"Okay.
At any time did she feed the fire?"
Tom allowed that Pat had gotten his parents worked up and then started
on him.
He said the shooting at Lake Lanier just about made his father
go "crazy."
"Do you think Pat did it?"
Tom shook his head.
"She was with me ... shoeing horses rifles and
down in Lithonia.... They [the police] took my checked, and there was
no way my rifles could have done that.
... He [Tom 5 s father] got all bent out of shape and went out and
bought a gun ... and he told all those people that it was gonna be over
by the weekend.
I was supposed to be in a parade in Atlanta.
The only thing I could figure out was he was planning on shooting me in
the parade."
"What did Pat say about all of this?"
frowned with the effort to "It
was a long time ago - Tom of stirred it up and made it worse.
emember.
"She just kind 'putative type person that .
. . Pat was a
very headstrong, mani would do anything to get what she wanted-and you
not know she was doing it.
She could take a married man and turn him
completely around .
. .
and talk him out of thirty years of marim not even know it.
. . .
Unless you'd been there, riage and h' imagine what it was like.
Pat
would have some idea you couldn't in her mind and she was going to get
her way.
If she came at you one way and you didn't do what she said,
she'd find another 'I you gave in to her.
way.
She'd just keep at you until Tom recalled that it was brought up in his
trial that phone calls had been made to his father the afternoon of the
murders.
"But I didn't see or hear her make them," he said.
Stoop asked Tom if he believed now that his father had exposed himself
to Pat.
person to do something "Naw.
My father was not the type of
like that."
"Why do you think she said that?"
"To get me stirred up."
"Did it work?"
"Well, it got me upset, but then .
. . I was scared to death.
I wanted
to know what was going to happen to me."
Tom's eyes clouded as he remembered his trial.
"It was a farce .
.
she was sitting there punching me in the ribs, and punching Ed in the
ribs, and the judge was having to tell her to be quiet and if she
didn't stop trying to run his courtroom, she was gonna have to
leave."
"Okay.
Let's go up to the murder Itself," Stoop said.
"You and Pat
drove up on that particular day together.
Correct?"
" I took her to the doctor."
Stoop could sense Tom's retreat; he would have to backpedal on his
questions and wait a while on the murders.
"Did she, in fact, go to