The wrestlers gather on the purple and white mats and make a semicircle around their coach, who is speaking in a whisper. A few of the boys are big and muscular. Others are younger, shorter, and their voices are still high. They are teen-aged, but they are just children, really. And children should never have to witness a murder, not one of their own. But it happened inside Romulus High School, and now they must learn to live with the nightmares. And it is not easy.
This is a story about madness, about a life snuffed out after only 18 years, for no reason except the rush of anger that kids like because it makes them feel grown-up and tough — until something tragic happens, a knife is stabbed into someone’s chest, and then they want to be kids again but they never can be.
What happened here? A young man went to school in the morning and he never came home. And now there are broken pieces of dreams all over the place, and there are teachers hugging students, there are flowers slowly wilting on classroom desks, flowers left over from last Tuesday, the first time anyone can remember a funeral service taking place in a high school auditorium. The parking lots overflowed. Reporters jammed the hallways. And inside, some 800 friends and family — most of them not yet old enough to drink — listened quietly to prayers and eulogies for Robert O’Day, whose body lay in the coffin just in front of the stage, surrounded by his wrestling trophies and covered with his varsity letter jacket.
A few miles away, in a Wayne County youth home, a 16 year- old boy from Inkster — who had never met Bobby O’Day before pulling a knife on him — was being held in custody, facing a charge of murder.
Romulus High lies hard off Interstate 94, just a few miles west of Metro Airport, so that at any given moment there’s probably a plane flying overhead, landing or taking off. Romulus could be any high school. A spidery maze of hallways, dotted with classroom doors, glass trophy cases, and white water fountains made of porcelain. Bells ring every hour, unleashing a five-minute hailstorm of young voices and sneakers running down the hall, until the bells ring again and the doors close and it is quiet.
On the last day of his life, Bobby O’Day came here expecting, as usual, to go to class and then wrestling practice. And have a few laughs with his friends in the hallway, and maybe put his arm around his girlfriend. He was, by everyone’s account, simply a great kid, a strong kid, a football player and wrestler who had taken high school popularity to the mats and won easily. His handsome face fairly leaps off the yearbook page. He was 18, tall and well-built, on the lip of becoming a college heart-throb in a few months. He had hoped to attend Western New Mexico University, because his parents, who own a family printing business, planned on moving to New Mexico to open a new shop once he graduated.
“Everybody we asked about the kid had nothing but praise for him,” said Mike Martinez, an assistant coach at Western New Mexico who recruited O’Day.
“His work habits, his attitude, you couldn’t find anything wrong with him.”
O’Day’s coaches had sent reels of film out to Martinez, along with a letter from the student himself stating how much he would like to “contribute to the program” should they decide to offer him a scholarship. Martinez was looking over the film about the time the bell rang at Romulus on the afternoon of Friday, January 31st. The last school bell Bobby O’Day would ever hear.
What actually happened that afternoon is sketchy. It will be for some time, because these are children involved here, and in this society we still protect children, even when they take a life.
What is known is enough. It is too much. There was a scuffle the day before between a wrestler and a freshman student in the hallway. Scuffle? Maybe just a bump. One of those mindless, “Who are you bumping?” kind of things that led the non-wrestler to say “I’m gonna get you.” And the next day, around 2:30 in the afternoon, he came back with friends, all bloated with that violent sensation that makes teenagers think they’re important when they act tough. And one of the friends had a knife.
They were looking for the wrestler. An assistant coach, Norman Butler, intercepted them and tried to get rid of them. Just then the wrestler they were looking for came out of the locker room. A fight broke out. A fight? Maybe just poking and jabbing. Butler tried to break it up. It was then that O’Day arrived, saw what was going on, and jumped in to help his teammate.
It wasn’t his fight. It wasn’t his doing. But that means nothing when children play with grown-up toys. O’Day picked the wrong guy, only he didn’t know it, and while the two kids who had started the whole stupid affair were exchanging harmless slaps, the wrong guy pulled out a six-inch pocketknife and stabbed O’Day, stabbed him once, but once in the chest is enough. The outsiders fled. And O’Day, bleeding and stunned, staggered back into the locker room where his fellow wrestlers were dressing. And then he collapsed. There was screaming. Shock. Within seconds O’Day was stretched out on the cement floor and someone had a shirt stuffed over the wound and it was soaking up the blood fast.
Wrestling coach Wayne Schimming was in the school office when someone screamed “Bob’s been stabbed!” and he sprinted down the corridor and pushed through the doors and saw a crowd around the handsome athlete that he had, more than occasionally, thought of as his own son. Every coach has one kid who has gets a passkey to his heart, and Bobby O’Day was it for Schimming. The two had spent countless hours together. The coach told his wife he’d like his own kids to grow up like Bobby, and not surprisingly, the coach’s kids looked up to him. Schimming was certain that Bobby would place in the state tournament this year, that he would get a scholarship, that he would be everything he could be. And now here he was covered with a bloody shirt and his eyes were closed.
“My first thought was just to get to him,” Schimming said, “to comfort him.” He pauses on the memory and his voice drys up. “I don’t know about, you know, medically, stages of consciousness but . . . he . . . when I got to him, he wasn’t responding to me.”
No goodbys or final words. That is the way it happens in real life.
A caravan of cars followed the ambulance to Westland Medical Center. Schimming stayed with Bobby’s parents and told them over and over “how much I loved him. How much we all loved him.” A doctor called the parents into a room. They asked Schimming to come too. He came out after a few minutes and approached a group of his wrestlers in the hospital waiting area. He told them the only way he knew how, which was the simplest way. “He died,” Schimming said.
There is no justice that follows. No satisfaction in the killer being apprehended. There is only irony, layer after layer, peeled back like the skin of an onion. It began when O’Day was stabbed in a fight that he knew nothing about. And it continued when the family returned home from the hospital that night, still stunned by the news, and not 10 minutes later the phone rang and it was Mike Martinez, the recruiter from Western New Mexico.
“Hello, is Bob there?” Martinez asked.
“This is Bob,” said Mr. O Day, who shared his son’s name.
“The one who plays football?”
“No,” the father answered softly, “My son is dead. He was killed today.”
Martinez apologized and hung up quickly. He never mentioned that he was calling to offer Bobby a scholarship.
It is one week after it all happened, and Wayne Schimming still wears the look of a shell-shocked man, as if someone had just clubbed him from behind and he is about to buckle at the knees and crumble. His thick neck and torso are stiff, his tie seems to choke him, and his blond hair frames a face that is taut with the fight against tears.
“Right now,” he said Friday morning, when asked how he was feeling, “I’m wondering how I’m going to get through the day.”
School was canceled for two days following the incident. The first was for the teachers to decide how best to handle the grief. The second was for the grief to be shared with the community.
Like most funerals, the service held for Bobby O’Day was a curious blend of sweetness and horror. The question of “Why did this have to happen?” could not be answered. And yet high school athletes from around the state, wrestlers whom O’Day had pinned to the mat, football players he had tackled, fellow teenagers who had envied his abilities, people who knew him and people who had never heard of him until he was a victim, came together to pray for him and weep for him. Many of the teenagers — children, really, despite the eye shadow and the leather jackets and the grown-up armor they like to wear — had never faced a life loss before.
Their pain came in every direction and every form. One student carried carnations from the casket with him for several days, until a guidance counselor finally told him to “let go.” One wrestler asked to quit the team, despite his excellent record. He had been in the locker room when it happened and has not returned since. The student who provoked the incident is transferring. The wrestler whom he bumped is off the team for now. Butler, the assistant coach who was in the middle when it all happened — and who now must forever fight the demons of “Why didn’t I? . . . Why couldn’t I? . . . ” — is still too upset to say anything.
There is no sharing the grief of the parents.
O’Day was a slice of all of them, all they had given him and all they wanted to be — one part athlete, one part student, one part leader, one part charmer, one part loving son.
He lived for everything. He died for nothing.
“It was terribly senseless,” said Romulus School superintendent William Bedell, “It was just two young men being macho; unfortunately, Robert O’Day is dead.”
The wrestlers begin to stretch on the purple and white mats. Though there are 35 to 40 kids on the team, there are only eight here today. It is snowing heavily outside and Schimming says he hopes that’s the reason, but he knows that it’s not. These kids are hurting. They are confused. Schimming brought a radio into practice because he felt the music might keep the room from an otherwise ghostly silence. But except for the music, it is pretty quiet anyhow.
Schimming goes downstairs to make a phone call, and walks back through the locker room where it all happened, and it all happens again inside his head.
“It’s in my mind all the time,” he says. He tells of how difficult it was to get the kids to even dress for a practice in that room. How empty the first practice was without Bobby leading the exercises, as was his custom.
“He’s just . . . not there,” said the coach.
In wrestling there are dozens of moves called “escapes,” designed to free the wrestler of the grasp of his opponent. Roll your hips out, spin your shoulders, get free. But you can roll Bobby O’Day’s death around into a hundred positions and you can’t escape its senselessness and you can’t escape it’s horror. And you can’t escape the sad fact that in days to come, when these Romulus High School students find themselves face to face with another person’s danger, a voice inside is going to say “Don’t get involved. remember what happened to Bobby.”
The locker room is quiet and clean now. A water fountain in locked in the on position and there is a small splashing sound that won’t quit. Taped on the window to the coach’s office are several notices about college scholarships, and a plainly-typed copy of a poem called “Don’t Quit” a verse common to locker rooms around the country. Part of it reads:
“Life is queer with its twists and turns
As everyone of us sometimes learns…
So stick to the fight when you’re hardest hit
It’s when things seem worst that you mustn’t quit”
Schimming shakes his head. He’s worried about the other wrestlers who aren’t here. It’s never happened before and there’s a big tourname
MITCH i read your book, i loved it, its been so many years since Bob passed away from now but he lives still, but Fyi , Bob passed away on a locker room Bench, i Helped carry him there, i dont know why but i was one of the last voices he heard, said to him , words of respect and love. i cant remember what was exactly said, what words in a situation as such, is suppose to be said? Bob O’Day will never not be Forgotten, He is one true person,
I was much younger. but would interact with his younger brother. I would see him now and then. Remembered when it happened. Such a senseless tragedy.