Fans know true crime doyen Ann Rule would have written a hell of a book about Darren Sharper.
We'd know everything there was to know about his pathology and childhood. Last time I talked to Rule, I tried to sell her on writing a book about the former NFLer who since has been convicted of raping and drugging women in multiple states.
In that phone chat a few months ago, Rule said that she was not feeling well and was using a wheelchair. She had not mentioned that earlier this year, when I called to tell her I was going to do a better job of staying in touch in 2015. I'd feel a little better today if I'd followed through when I thought about calling her few weeks ago.
The author of more than 30 books, a reliable bestseller, Rule died Sunday at age 83 outside her beloved Seattle, with her family, including her rock, daughter Leslie Rule, reportedly nearby.
In the mid-'70s, Ann Rule was working on her first book about a series of unsolved Seattle murders. She also volunteered at a crisis hot line, a sad setting made more pleasant because she worked alongside a handsome young man she'd thought would be a great catch for some woman. He turned out to be the charming serial murderer Ted Bundy. The book about her connection with Bundy, "The Stranger Beside Me," made Rule's career.
I first contacted Rule when I was a courts reporter for the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press and fascinated with Bundy, at that time the subject of five books. I had read three of them and I tracked down Rule's number in an effort to get the rest. A friendship was born between the Lowell, Mich., native and me.
"It's so great to find a kindred spirit who loves the same authors, movies, actors and everything," Rule wrote in "Possession," one of the books she autographed for me.
Ours was not an instant friendship. The personal radar that should have made the hairs on the back of her neck sit up when she was with Bundy had failed her, so she was a suspicious person. I'm pretty sure she had a police friend vet me to make sure I wasn't deranged or criminal. I became such a trusted friend that I once helped her thwart a potential stalker.