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
East Point police and asked for a complete investigation.
"We already
have a detective on it," she was told.
By the time jean got to South Fulton Hospital, her father had been
taken to his room.
He was still unconscious and he had tubes sprouting
from every body orifice.
"Paw," she said.
"Paw, it's Jean.
Can you
hear me?"
He gave no sign that he was with her at all.
jean noticed that the Radcliffes seemed to be everywhere she went.
She
wondered where Pat was-probably home with her another.
That thought gave her a sudden chill.
When she was distraught and frustrated, jean Boggs could be abrasive
and demanding.
She had been shut off from her parents for months, and
her father might be dying.
She approached the detective, who was
making notes, and demanded that he investigate thoroughly.
A bit
ruffled, Tedford assured her he was doing just that.
She also
suggested that he familiarize himself with her brother's and
sister-in-law's murders.
Jean minced no words; she flat out accused
Pat Allanson of having something to do with her father's coma.
"He
does not drink, and he does not take pills," she insisted.
"If he's in
a coma, she did something to him.
She's practically moved in with them, and I think she's after what they
have."
Tedford had seen his share of family beefs and rivalries, and he had
heard wild accusations tossed around.
But there was something about
Jean Boggs's words that made the hairs stand up on the back of his
neck.
After assuring her that,he would keep at it until he found out
what had caused her father's coma, he hurried back to the ER to ask
that the contents of Paw Allanson's stomach be retained for
examination.
It was too late.
The emesis had already been disposed of.
By Monday morning, June 14, Paw seemed to be out of danger but he
remained a miserably sick man.
Bob Tedford and Detective H. R. Turner
drove out to 4137 Washington Road to talk with Nona Allanson.
They
were not prepared to find the lady as incapacitated as she was.
Debbie
Cole, Pat's younger daughter, answered their knock and invited them
into the living room.
From somewhere in the rear of the little house
they could hear a woman sobbing and wailing; she sounded as if she were
in desperate distress.
"That's Mrs. Allanson," Debbie explained.
"She's really upset about
everything.
If you'll wait here, I'll try to get her out here to talk
with you.
My mother's with her."
A few minutes later, a lushly pretty woman who appeared to be in her
mid-thirties approached.
Although she limped noticeably herself, she
was pushing an elderly woman in a wheelchair.
She introduced herself
as Mrs.
Tom Allanson, the "granddaughter" of the senior Allansons.
Tedford quickly realized how compromised Nona Allanson's speech was.
He couldn't understand a word she said.
"I'll translate," Pat said.
"I can understand her."
It was a good thing she could, Tedford thought, because he sure
couldn't.
Pat repeated what she said the older woman had said.
"She
said that Paw's been taking pills-too many pills.
No, she hasn't seen
him, but she says he's been drinking more than usual, and she hasn't
seen him eat for several days.
She called us Saturday morning and told
us that Big Allanson-that's what she calls Paw-was trying to kill her,
so of course we rushed right over."
It was apparent that the old woman was growing more and more upset and
Tedford stopped the interview.
Pat ushered the detectives out onto the
front porch, where they could talk privately.
She repeated, almost
verbatim, the story that Tedford had heard from the Radcliffes the day
before.
He noticed that her eyes brimmed with tears as she recalled
how Paw had gone downhill with the drinking and the pills.
She seemed
about to break into sobs.
"He tried to run me off the road, you know," Pat said quietly.
"What?"
"He did.
He tried to run me off the road."
Tedford recalled the elderly shell of a man he had seen in the R. He
scarcely looked capable of driving a car, much less aimit at another
vehicle and forcing it off the road.
"Why would he try to run you off the road?"
he asked.
Pat cast her green eyes down and sighed.
"When Paw was in the hospital
during his last heart attack, he felt he was going to die.
He had me
send for his attorneys-Mr.
Hamner and Mr.
Reeves.
He told them about a killing in 1974.
He admitted to 'them that he did
it-not my husband.
Personally, I was never so shocked in my life.
It
just took me by surprise that he would -sell that to his attorneys.
I
sat in the corner, and I started taking notes .
. . and he realizes that I know about this.
His attitude toward me
completely changed."
Tedford had read the case file on the Allanson
murders.
He wondered if Pat was telling him that old Walter had killed
his dwn son and daughter-in-law.
If she was, it was a startling-an
almost unbelievable-revelation, but she seemed incapable of uying it in
so many words.
"I hate .
she began, her eyes still bright with unshed tears, "I hate
to know something that will get someone out of tmuble but will get
somebody else into a lot of trouble."
She looked so forlorn that Tedford felt sorry for her; she was
itruggling with supressed secrets that she didn't want to tell him.
And yet at the same time, he knew, she did want to.
Finally she blurted it out.
"When Paw got out of the hospital -after
his heart attack-I was finally able to set him down one day, and I just
outright asked him would he tell me again what he to .
Id his
lawyers.
I guess I needed it down on paper-in case .
. . in case anything
happened to Paw."
The detectives leaned forward, fascinated to hear what had happened
next.
What was it that old Mr. Allanson had confessed to?
But that
was all Pat was going to tell them.
She wiped her eyes with her little
lace handkerchief and forced a bright smile.
"Oh, never mind," she said.
"I guess I was just thinking out loud.
I'm just so concerned about Paw coming back to this house.
I'm sorry to say I don't want him back here with Ma.
I'm scared to
death he really will hurt her next time .
. . ...
Pat Allanson was certainly a handsome woman; the cane made her seem
frail, but she had a perfect, full-breasted figure, and she dressed to
show it off.
Her thick auburn hair was coiled and twisted in what
women called a French roll.
The detectives knew that her husband was
down in Jackson Prison for murder.
No wonder she teared up so
easily.
She must have been through hell.
It was easier-in the beginning, at least-to talk with Pat Allanson,
with her sweet, sad manner, than it was to deal with Jean Boggs.
Jean
was an attractive woman too, slender and tall with silky black hair.
She was immaculately groomed right down to her long scarlet
fingernails.
But she was an angry, bitter woman in a hurry, and she
seemed to have little faith in the justice system.
She knew the brass
in the East Point Police Department, and she wasn't averse to going
over the detectives' heads to demand a quicker resolution to her
suspicions about her father's illness.
jean was incensed that the contents of her father's stomach had been
thrown out.
How were they ever going to prove now what she
suspected-that Pat had given him' something to make him so sick?
She
had seen the old-fashioned whiskey bottle that Paw was supposed to have
been drinking out of.
There was just no way.
Years ago, her father had made blackberry wine from the wild berries on
his farm, but he hardly even tasted it himself -he gave it away.
He
was almost eighty years old.
Why would he start drinking at this
age?
On Sunday afternoon after leaving the hospital, Jean and her neighbor,
Sherry Allen, had dropped by the Washington Road house to check on Nona
Allanson.
They found Pat there, feeding the old lady lunch and fussing
over her.
Pat asked Jean how Paw was, and Jean said he was still
unconscious but unless he got pneumonia or another heart attack or
something, he was going to pull through.
Pat shook her head, disagreeing.
"It doesn't look like he'll make
it."
"Well, we really don't know yet," Jean answered slowly.
Pat had fixed her green eyes on Jean and told her that Jean had no idea
in the whole wide world what a dirty old man Paw really was.
"You
don't know that old man," she said.
"He's done things you wouldn't believe.
He's not good and kind like
you think."
jean started to shake her head in warning as she glanced
at l'i-*er mother, but Nona just sat there and let Pat rave on about
btr husband.
Although she couldn't speak, Nona was sharp enough.
It seemed to Jean
that her mother had heard accusations this before.
Nona made no move
to correct Pat; she apparantly believed what Pat was saying.