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
from their place in Zebulon.
Pat said she would call there.
Tom finished his horseshoeing that morning before they left for East
Point, and he made a decision.
The way to make peace with his father
would be to talk with his mother.
But that wouldn't be easy either.
He had tried to call her at the doctor's office where she worked and
she just got upset with him.
He couldn't call her at home because his
father was usually home when she was.
Tom would have to go to see her
before his father got home from work.
If he was lucky, he would have
perhaps an hour's window of time to try to talk some sense to her.
. . .
Exactly what happened on Norman Berry Drive on July 3, 1974, would be
the subject of conjecture for almost two decades.
Certain things were unarguable: Big Carolyn and Walter went, as usual,
to their jobs that Wednesday, she in her white nurse's uniform and he
in bluish gray striped trousers, a white business shirt, and a dark
gray tie.
They ate lunch together as always, promptly at noon.
Big
Carolyn got off work shortly after four, and Walter was supposed to
leave his office by six.
The only thing unusual on that day was that Walter had left his office
from 2:45 to 3:00 P.m. When he returned, he showed his secretary, Mary
McBride, what he had purchased.
It was a Marlin .45/70 lever-action
rifle with a box of ammunition to go with itthe largest caliber made.
He had paid Berryman's Sports Center in East Point $201.15 for the
gun.
In the space of just a few months, Walter had obtained two weapons-the
.32 pistol Jake Dailey had lent him and the new, powerful rifle.
It was an hour's drive or more from Zebulon to East Point and Pat and
Tom left Kentwood well before midafternoon, with Tom driving carefully
because the rain had brought up the oil slick on the roads; he didn't
want to risk any further injury to Pat."
Pat said goodbye to Tom at
Dr. Thompson's office on Cleveland Avenue about 3:30 P.m. and watched
him walk off toward his bank, where he had some business.
At about the same time, Horace Smith, a fire fighter with the East
Point Fire Department, was driving one of the department's fire rigs on
a test run down Norman Berry Drive.
He noticed the tall man striding
along the south side of the street, a man with long light brown hair
who wore Levi's and cowboy boots.
Suddenly, Smith recognized the man;
he was an old friend.
Smith yelled, "Hey, Tom!"
But the tall man didn't answer.
4
A second unusual event took place that afternoon, varying Walter
Allanson's heretofore precise schedule once more.
First he had bought
the rifle, and then he left for home early.
His staff recalled that he
had received a call at his office sometime around 5:30 from a woman who
didn't give her name.
She had been brusque.
"You'd better tell Mr.
Allanson to get home as fast as he can," she said.
"His son is headed
over there to cause trouble.
Allanson ran to his car and drove home.
Big Carolyn was already home with her grandchildren, Russ and Sherry,
whom she had picked up at the day-care center.
She carried in a case
of Cokes she had bought for the next day's picnic-and a blowup plastic
blue dinosaur for the kids' wading pool-and set them down on the dining
room table.
When Walter walked in, he unwrapped the new rifle and left
the box it came in beside the Cokes.
"Daddy," Big Carolyn told him, "it's the oddest thing.
It wasn't
lightning at all today, but the lights won't go on, and the
television's dead."
Walter ran down the basement steps and found that someone had pulled
the main switch.
He pushed the circuit breaker over and back and all
the lights came on and the refrigerator started to hum.
Within minutes, Little Carolyn-or as Walter called her,
Junior-arrived.
Suspecting that somebody had been in the basement, Big Carolyn stayed
upstairs in the kitchen with the youngsters while Walter and Junior
searched the house inside and out.
They checked all the windows and
doors to be sure they were locked, and looked to see if anything was
missing.
That was when they discovered that the phone line had been cut.
Walter said he also missed two items: an old leather suitcase and an
Excel 20-gauge shotgun he had had for years.
He went to Lee and Mary
Dorton's house, two doors down, and called the East Point police.
The
Dortons came back to his house with him, and while they were waiting
for the police, he showed them where the telephone line had been neatly
sliced in two.
According to the Dortons, Walter didn't seem anxious or even very
concerned.
He was more matter-of-fact about the situation.
After all,
it was daylight, early on a summer's evening.
And, Lord knows, it
wasn't as if he hadn't been expecting trouble.
Sergeant C. T. Callahan of the East Point police pulled up the long
driveway on Norman Berry at one minute after seven and Walter Allanson
met him outside.
He wanted to report a burglary.
"I can't tell where
he got in," he said, "but he took a suitcase and my twenty -gauge Excel
shotgun-" "He?"
"My son, Walter Thomas Allanson."
Callahan moved toward the house and said he would check it out, but
Allanson blocked his path.
"No need.
I did it myself.
I've checked
it once, and there's no one there."
Despite Callahan's concern about a citizen doing the job he was trained
for, Allanson was adamant.
He had once served as a reserve police
officer himself; he knew what to do.
There was no need for the police
to bother coming inside.
He only wanted official confirmation that the
phone line had been cut, and he led Callahan around to the east side of
the house and pointed out the dangling wire.
It had obviously been cut
deliberately; whoever did it would have had to wade through thick
rhododendron bushes to get to it.
Allanson went into the house and returned with the .45 rifle to show
Callahan.
"I got this rifle here," he said.
"I know who it is, and
I'm going to take care of it myself."
"Don't do anything drastic," Callahan warned.
"Call us first."
Shaking his head, Callahan backed down the drive.
You never could tell
about family beefs.
But you didn't argue with Walter O'Neal Allanson;
he was an outstanding citizen in East Point.
Probably half of the East
Point police force knew him.
Callahan couldn't force police protection
on him if he didn't want it.
Walter walked back in the house and put the new .45 in its box on the
dining room table.
Then, leaving Big Carolyn and the kids at the
house, Little Carolyn drove him over to her nearby apartment to be sure
that no one was waiting inside to attack her when she came home, and to
see if anything had been stolen.
The place was just as she had left it
that morning on her way to work.
They drove back to Norman Berry Drive.
On the way, Little Carolyn
spotted a blue jeep with a Pike County tag on it in front of them and
said, "Daddy, that's Pat!"
"Well, just follow her, Junior, and see where she goes."
They followed the jeep as it turned onto Norman Berry Drive and then
into the driveway right next door to the Allansons'.
That was Big Carolyn's mother's house.
Mae Mama Lawrence was getting
on in years, and they certainly didn't want her upset.
The jeep sat there for a moment, but as Walter leaped out of his car
and started toward it, Pat quickly backed down Mae Mama's driveway and
disappeared down the street.
"You go look for her!"
Walter called to Little Carolyn.
She did as he
said and drove slowly around adjacent streets, but the blue jeep had
vanished.
When she came back, Walter instructed her to stay in the
front yard and watch to see if Pat came back again.
She walked to the crest of the sloping lawn and scanned both sides of
the boulevard for Pat.
But then Sherry started crying and Little Carolyn hurried into the
kitchen to see what was wrong.
Later when she tried to reconstruct
what came next, Tom's ex-wife saw the scene in agonizing slow motion.
Big Carolyn had turned toward Mary Dorton, who was standing nervously
in the dining room.
"Well, where's Walter?"
she asked.
"He went to the basement," Mary answered.
"Whatever for?"
Mary shrugged.
"I don't know."
Although he had searched the basement before, "Daddy" Allanson,
carrying his borrowed pistol, had clomped downstairs again.
The three
women huddled together with the crying children and thought they heard
another man's voice-or maybe it was just Walter-muttering to himself in
the basement.
Suddenly, Carolyn heard her father-in-law yell up the stairs,
"Junior!
Get the kids out of the house!
I have him cornered in the
cubbyhole!"
Both Carolyns pushed the children toward Mary Dorton, who clutched them
in her arms and ran toward her own house.
Walter called up the stairs once more.
"Mother!
Bring me that new
gun!"
Still in slow motion-or so it seemed in retrospectBig Carolyn
took the .45-caliber rifle from the box on the dining room table and
headed toward the basement.
Little Carolyn begged her not to go