Read Columbine Online

Authors: Dave Cullen

Tags: #General, #Social Science, #History, #Violence in Society, #Murder, #State & Local, #United States, #History - U.S., #Education, #United States - 20th Century (1945 to 2000), #Educational Policy & Reform - School Safety, #Murder - General, #School Safety & Violence, #West (AK; CA; CO; HI; ID; MT; NV; UT; WY), #True Crime, #Columbine High School Massacre; Littleton; Colo.; 1999, #School Health And Safety, #Littleton, #Violence (Sociological Aspects), #Columbine High School (Littleton; Colo.), #School shootings - Colorado - Littleton, #United States - State & Local - West, #Educational Policy & Reform, #Colorado, #Modern, #School shootings

Columbine (55 page)

BOOK: Columbine
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Three hours later, police found Eric crumpled, Dylan sprawled leisurely. His legs flopped over to the side, one knee atop the other, ankles crossed. One arm draped across his stomach, underlining the word emblazoned on his black T-shirt. His head lay back, mouth open, jaw slack. Blood trickled out the corners, toward his ears. He looked serene. The red letters on his chest screamed wrath.

53. At the Broken Places

I
t took eight and a half years to erect the permanent memorial. In 2006, the fund hit 70 percent of its reduced budget, permitting construction to begin. An event was planned for the groundbreaking in June--to honor the dead, and to publicize the $300,000 outstanding. Bill Clinton flew in. Two thousand mourners turned out.

Dawn Anna read the thirteen names. "We're here because we love them," she said. "We're here as a family and as a community that's been through the darkest of days and is coming through to the light."

Thunderheads rolled in and opened up on the crowd. Scattered umbrellas popped up, but most people were caught unaware. Nobody moved. They didn't care.

This was Republican country, but Clinton's introduction drew wild applause. These people were proud to host an American president.

"I am here today because millions of Americans were changed by Columbine," he said. "It was one of the darkest days Hillary and I had in the White House. We wept, we prayed."

Right before his appearance, she'd called from the Senate, he said--"Just to remind me of what we did that day. This was a momentous event in the history of the country. And every parent [was] left feeling helpless, even the president."

He had watched the survivors evolve, Clinton said. He compared them to his colleague, Max Cleland, who'd left both legs and one arm in Vietnam. It was a struggle for Max to dress every morning. He could have resented the thousands who came back unscathed or who'd avoided the draft, like him, Clinton said. What a waste that would be. Cleland ran for the Senate and represented Georgia for six years. He was fond of quoting Ernest Hemingway, and Clinton recited his favorite passage: "The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places."

"Every day, from now on, the world will break someone," Clinton added. "These magnificent families, in memory of their children, and their teacher, can help them always to be strong."

____

Patrick Ireland proposed to Kacie, the girl he'd met his first night at CSU. They would never have met, he pointed out, if he had not been shot.

They married on an August afternoon. Six bridesmaids in rose red gowns walked the aisle of an ornate Catholic church.

Mr. D came. He was struck by the sight of Patrick standing at the altar with no physical support. He was also taken aback by the number of classmates involved. It was a familiar pattern. For twenty years, he had watched alumni drift away from their high school buds, but the two thousand survivors stuck close.

Patrick walked out gracefully and composed. Mr. D wiped off a tear. Patrick's doctor from Craig was there, still incredulous. So was Laura, the girl Patrick had been afraid to ask to prom.

The wedding party took a month of ballroom dance lessons to prepare for the reception. Patrick spun Kacie across the floor. They waltzed and two-stepped and did the fox-trot. They closed out the first dance with a deep dip. Patrick joined his mother for "Because You Loved Me." Diane Warren wrote the song to her father for encouraging her when no one else believed. Kathy teared up quietly in her son's arms.

____

Former agent Dwayne Fuselier was still being asked to address law enforcement groups and teachers' conventions. They still wanted to know
why?
Fuselier kept agreeing to speak, insisting each presentation would be the last.

He continues to teach hostage negotiators in the Third World. He finds a lot more time for golf, and his mind wanders occasionally to Eric and Dylan--with no satisfaction, because the ending never changes.

Both his sons graduated from college and launched successful careers.

He still hopes to interview Eric and Dylan's parents.

____

Brad and Misty Bernall resettled nearby in New Mexico. They are much happier there.

She Said Yes
was reissued in two paperback formats, a library edition, and an audiobook. It has sold over a million copies. The Web is loaded with sites unabashedly recounting the myth. Cassie's youth pastor was right: the church stuck with the story.

Local churches felt a surge following Columbine. Attendance spiked, fervor was unprecedented. It faded. Pastors reported no long-term impact.

____

The Harrises and Klebolds remained secluded. The Harrises eventually sold their house, but remained in the area. The Klebolds have not moved. In July of 2006, Dylan's older brother, Byron, got married.

____

Kids at Columbine stopped using the word as the name of a massacre. It became just a high school again. Smokers returned to chatting up adult strangers who strolled through Clement Park near their pit. It did not occur to them to be afraid.

When a journalist stopped by to assess the return to normalcy, they were puzzled. Why would anyone be interested in their boring school? They really didn't know. Their faces lit up when they discovered he was from the city.
What were the clubs like? Had he been to Colfax Avenue? Were there really strip clubs and winos and hookers there?

Of course they remembered the tragedy. What an awful day. Their grade schools were locked down, everyone was scared. Several had had older siblings trapped in the high school. Their parents had been upset for months.
So what was Denver like?

____

Mr. D had two grandchildren. His son settled into a career and his daughter got engaged. Frank didn't let Diane Meyer get away the second time. After his divorce, they reunited in person. She was just as funny as in high school. Same blue eyes, same insightful mind and selflessness. "Someone to lean on," Frank said. They began dating again. On Christmas Eve 2003, Frank asked her to marry him. She said yes. They remain engaged.

Mr. D informed his students he planned to retire. He will stay through graduation in 2012, or 2013. He will be fifty-seven or fifty-eight. He's not sure what he'll do then. Golf, travel, enjoy.

____

Linda Sanders pulled out of her depression. She still has rough days, but not so often. By 2008, she was dating again.

____

The memorial felt like the final step. One last controversy marred its completion. In the spring of 2007, as bulldozers carved out the site on the back slope of Rebel Hill, Brian Rohrbough went to battle with the memorial committee. An inner Ring of Remembrance honored the Thirteen in a special way. The larger Ring of Healing that surrounded it would bear quotes from students, teachers, friends, neighbors--everyone touched by the tragedy, whether or not a bullet actually pierced their skin. Each of the thirteen families was allocated a space on the inner ring for a large inscription in the brown marble to remember their child, father, or spouse. They were asked to keep it tasteful and respectful.

Twelve and a half families agreed. Sue Petrone and Brian Rohrbough submitted separate inscriptions for Danny, to be run side by side. Sue described her boy's blue eyes, engaging smile, and infectious laugh. Brian submitted an angry rant blaming Columbine on a godless school system in a nation that legalized abortion where authorities lied and covered up their crimes. He ended with a biblical quote, declaring,
There is no peace for the wicked.

The committee asked Brian to tone it down. He refused. Both sides agreed to keep the wording confidential, but the gist of the dispute leaked. It caused yet another firestorm in Colorado. The public was split. A standoff ensued. Nobody wanted an angry tirade inside the Ring of Remembrance. The committee had the power to stop it. Brian dared them to do it.

It was no contest. Even after eight years, nothing trumped a grieving dad.

____

The Columbine memorial was dedicated on a sunny afternoon in September 2007. A few thousand visitors filed quietly past the inner wall. There was no ruckus over the angry inscription. It did not draw more onlookers than the other twelve, even out of curiosity. There was no discernible reaction. No one seemed to care.

Patrick Ireland spoke on behalf of the injured. "The shootings were an event that occurred," he said. "But it did not define me as a person. It did not set the tone for the rest of my life."

Thirteen doves were released. Seconds later, two hundred more fluttered free--an arbitrary number, to signify everyone else. They scattered up in all directions. For a moment, they seemed to fill the entire sky. Then they found one another and coalesced into a single flock, a massive white cloud weaving from left to right and back again, against the clear blue sky.

Timeline: Before

S
OPHOMORE
Y
EAR
January 1997
The missions begin.
February 28, 1997
Wayne Harris starts his journal.
March 31, 1997
Dylan starts his journal.
Summer 1997
Eric and Dylan start at Blackjack; build first pipe bomb.
July 23, 1997
Dylan first mentions killing in his journal--possibly figuratively.
August 7, 1997
Eric's Web site is reported to the police. It lists his "I HATE" rants.
J
UNIOR
Y
EAR
October 2, 1997
Eric, Dylan, and Zack are suspended for breaking into lockers.
November 3, 1997
Dylan first mentions a killing spree in his journal.
Unknown
Eric and Dylan steal from the school computer room.
January 30, 1998
Eric and Dylan are arrested for breaking linto a van.
February 15, 1998
Deputies find a pipe bomb near Eric's house.
February 16, 1998
Eric begins seeing a psychiatrist and soon starts taking Zoloft.
Spring 1998*
Eric's dad catches him with a pipe bomb.
March 18, 1998
Dylan warns Brooks Brown about Eric's death threats.
March 19, 1998
Eric and Dylan conduct their intake interview for the Diversion program.
March 25, 1998
Eric and Dylan are formally sentenced in court.
April 1998
Investigator Guerra drafts an affidavit for a warrant to search Eric's house.
April 8, 1998
Eric receives his Diversion program contract.
April 10, 1998
Eric begins his journal.
by May 9, 1998
Eric and Dylan outline the attack, write about it in each other's yearbook.
May 14, 1998
Eric has switched from Zoloft to Luvox.
S
ENIOR
Y
EAR
October 22, 1998
Eric begins pipe bomb arsenal production; resumes journal writing the next day.
November 13, 1998
Eric turns in his paper on Nazis.
November 17, 1998
Eric describes his sadistic rape fantasies in his journal.
November 22, 1998
Eric and Dylan buy two shotguns and a rifle at the Tanner Gun Show.
December 2, 1998
Eric fires his weapon for the first time.
January 23, 1999
Eric and Dylan buy the TEC-9 from Mark Manes.
January 20, 1999
Eric and Dylan complete the Diversion program, and Dylan resumes his journal.
February 7, 1999
Dylan submits his prescient story about killing "preps."
March 6, 1999
Eric and Dylan practice shooting at Rampart Range.
March 15, 1999
Eric and Dylan begin filming the Basement Tapes.
March 20, 1999
Eric attempts to recruit Chris Morris.
April 5, 8, 15, 1999
Eric talks to a Marine recruiter.
April 17, 1999
The prom.
April 20, 1999
The massacre.
* Unknown date, approximately this period.
BOOK: Columbine
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