A month and a half before April, Rachel Joy Scott (1981-1999) stands on the stage of the Columbine High School auditorium and performs a mime to a recorded song called “Watch the Lamb.” The tape jams partway through. A boy who runs audio for the theater production club climbs up and fixes it so she can finish her piece. She thanks him. His name is Dylan Klebold (1981-1999). Her name, Rachel, carries a meaning older than either of them. In Hebrew it names a ewe, a young female lamb.
On April 20, 1999, Rachel eats lunch on the grass outside the west entrance with her friend Richard Castaldo. She is the first of thirteen to die. Castaldo takes eight rounds and lives, paralyzed. Inside the library, under a table, Cassie René Bernall (1981-1999) prays out loud while a freshman named Emily Wyant crouches two feet away. A gunman slaps the tabletop, says “peekaboo,” looks underneath, and fires once. Cassie dies at the table. Across the room another junior, Valeen Schnurr, lies on the floor with thirty-four shotgun pellets in her. Klebold hears her and comes back. He asks if she believes in God. She says yes. He asks why. She says because she believes, and her parents raised her that way. He reloads. She crawls. She lives.
Three girls. One dies on the lawn. One dies at the table. One bleeds on the carpet and survives. Within months a single syllable detaches from the body that spoke it and goes looking for a better home.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gave the clearest account of why a culture needs a girl to have said yes. In The Denial of Death he argued that man lives under two pressures he can never set down. The first is the knowledge that he will die and rot like an animal. The second, sharper one, is the fear that his short life will not count, that he will leave no scar on the world, that the universe will close over him as if he had never been. A culture answers both fears at once by handing each man a part to play in a drama larger than his own body. Becker called the drama a hero system. Inside it a man can earn a kind of permanence, a place in a story that outlives his flesh. The blood and the panic get converted into meaning. A school assembly, a bestselling book, a stained-glass window, a body count: each is a bid to matter past the grave, and each runs on the same fuel.
The skeptic tells a different story about Columbine, and it deserves a hearing because much of it is true. In that story the martyr legend is what you get when you take two boys, a library, and a shotgun, and add the wishes of grieving adults. Subtract the wishes and nothing supernatural remains. Charles Taylor (b. 1931) named this kind of account in A Secular Age. He called it a subtraction story, the modern habit of treating belief as a residue, the leftover film of comfort that clings to facts until reason wipes it clean. The subtraction story about Cassie runs like this. She was praying, not professing. The famous exchange happened across the room, to a girl who lived. Strip the legend and you are left with the bare event, which is only horror.
Becker would not argue against the facts. He would point out that the hero system is not a residue. It is a thing people build, on purpose, because the alternative is to look at the bare event and find it unbearable. The yes is not a stain on the facts. It is a load-bearing wall. To see what the wall holds up, walk the word through the worlds that needed it. The same three letters carry a different weight in each.
Begin with the world that canonized her first, the evangelical youth culture of the late 1990s. This is a world of WWJD bracelets and See You at the Pole, of stadium rallies where a band plays and a man with a headset microphone asks thousands of teenagers to come down to the floor and give their lives to Christ. In this world a yes is a transaction with eternity. It is the altar-call decision, the moment a soul changes its address. A teenager who says yes to God under a gun has performed the act the whole culture organizes itself to produce, performed it under the hardest test imaginable and passed. Her death recruits. The youth pastors understood the arithmetic at once. A girl who dies for the yes turns every wavering kid in the bleachers into a potential convert, because she has shown them that the decision is worth a life. The hero system here promises the convert his own permanence, a name written in a book that does not burn. Cassie’s yes was not a fact to that world. It was a closing argument for the soul.
The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church. Tertullian (c. 155-c. 220) wrote a version of that line, and it gives the evangelical world its template, though most of the teenagers in the bleachers had never read him. Behind the youth rally stands an older hero system, the one the early church ran under Rome. Polycarp (c. 69-155) stood before a proconsul who offered him his life if he would curse Christ and swear by the emperor’s fortune. He refused and burned. Perpetua (c. 181-203), a young mother, wrote her own account in a Carthage prison and walked into the arena. In that world the witness is the whole point, and the Greek word for witness is martys. The death is not the price of the testimony. The death is the testimony, the only proof a faith can offer that it outweighs the body. A yes spoken to a gun is the purest coin that world knows, because it can be paid only once and never refunded. Set the evangelical assembly beside the Roman arena and the yes shifts meaning by an inch that turns out to be a mile. In the arena it confirms the dead. In the assembly it converts the living.
Move east and the witness changes again. At Karbala in the year 680 a small band led by Husayn ibn Ali (626-680), grandson of the Prophet, rode against a vastly larger army knowing they would lose. They lost. Shia devotion grew an entire world around that defeat, a world of mourning, of yearly grief at Ashura, of breast-beating processions and passion plays. Here the witness is loyalty to truth against a tyrant strong enough to kill you for it, and the yes is the refusal to bend even when bending would save your skin. The death is unjust, and the injustice is the point. A community keeps faith by grieving the murder forever. To this hero system a girl shot for her belief reads as recognizable scripture, the just one cut down by the powerful, the wound that organizes a people’s tears. But the meaning has tilted once more. In Karbala the yes indicts the killer and binds the survivors in sorrow. In the evangelical world the same yes mostly comforts and recruits. The mourner at Ashura wants you to weep. The youth pastor wants you to decide.
Now bring in the people whose hero system runs on the opposite of all this, the reporters. Dave Cullen (b. 1961) published a piece in Salon in September 1999 under a flat, total headline saying that nearly everything known about the killings was wrong. Hanna Rosin (b. 1971) wrote a hard version of the doubt for the Washington Post. To the journalist a witness is a source, and a source is only as good as what corroborates him. Testimony gets weighed against the audio recording, the FBI, the autopsy diagram, the girl under the table who says it never happened. The reporter’s bid for permanence is the correct record, the account that holds up after the candles go out, the byline that survives precisely because later reporters cannot break it. In that world the heroic act at Columbine is the debunking. A yes that cannot be sourced is not sacred. It is unconfirmed. Rosin made the clash explicit when she wrote that the power of the story is what counts and the truth a trifle, and she meant it as an indictment. The journalist hears that sentence as confession. The believer hears it as wisdom. The same words. Two worlds.
Between the believer and the reporter sits a third world that explains how an honest man can hear a yes that no one said. The cognitive scientist studies memory as a fallible instrument, a reconstruction that runs forward from a guess, not a tape played back from storage. Elizabeth Loftus (b. 1944) spent a career showing how a confident memory can be wholly false, planted by a leading question or borrowed from a neighbor’s account. Craig Scott, Rachel’s younger brother, was in the library. He heard a girl say yes. He attached the voice to Cassie Bernall and told investigators so, and other students agreed, and the story set like concrete before anyone doubted it. Then officers walked Craig back into the room and asked him to point to the table where the voice had come from. He pointed at the spot where Valeen Schnurr had been lying, not Cassie’s table, and he got physically sick when he understood what that meant. To the memory scientist this is not a lie and not a miracle. It is the ordinary failure of a terrified seventeen-year-old’s recall, a true sound bonded to a wrong face under the worst conditions a brain can face. The yes was real. The pointing finger found the wrong girl. In this hero system the heroic act is doubting your own certainty, and the permanence on offer is a law of mind that holds for everyone, forever, the cold consolation of having understood the error rather than repeated it.
The parents occupy the world with the highest stakes, because for them the yes is what makes the morning survivable. Misty Bernall wrote She Said Yes: The Unlikely Martyrdom of Cassie Bernall and Plough published it in September 1999, four months after her daughter died, with a foreword by Madeleine L’Engle (1918-2007). It reached number eight on the New York Times list. Darrell Scott (b. 1949) and Beth Nimmo (b. 1953) built books and then an organization, Rachel’s Challenge, that has run assemblies for tens of millions of schoolchildren. Read coldly, the book is the immortality project in its plainest form, a dead child made to count by being made to save other children. Investigators told the Bernalls within weeks that the exchange might never have happened, and the book repeated the yes anyway. A man can call that dishonest. Becker would call it load-bearing. Take the yes away and a mother is left with a girl who prayed under a table, asking God why this was happening and saying she wanted to go home, and then nothing. The yes is the wall between Misty Bernall and that sentence. Robert Reccord of the North American Mission Board found the formula that lets the parent’s world absorb the reporter’s facts without collapse. Regardless of who said yes, he said, a young person testified to her faith, so praise God. The fact recedes. The function survives.
There is a darker world to name, because Becker insisted that the hero urge does not divide cleanly into saints and monsters. The two killers had a hero system too. Their writings are a bid for significance run through hatred, a wish to be remembered, to be counted past their own deaths, to out-rank an earlier mass murderer in the only ledger they cared about. The peekaboo at the table is the voice of a man for whom the victim’s belief is nothing, because the yes and the no change no part of his plan. He needs the body, not the answer. The same terror of insignificance that built the youth rally built the massacre, pointed the other way. This is the hardest thing Becker asks a reader to hold. The girl who says yes to live forever and the boy who kills to be remembered forever are running the same engine on opposite tracks. I set this down plainly and leave the reader his own response.
Which brings the essay to the girl the legend cannot use. Valeen Schnurr said yes. She said it to Klebold, on her knees, bleeding from thirty-four wounds, and she meant it, and there is no dispute that the exchange happened, because she lived to describe it. She is the one person in the library whose witness can be confirmed by the witness herself. And the hero system has almost no place for her. Christian media folded her yes into Cassie’s story and ran the dead girl’s name. When Schnurr spoke about her own ordeal she found herself accused of copying it. At a youth rally held to honor Cassie and Rachel, in the presence of crowds gathered to celebrate the martyrs, a survivor who had said the words and meant them had her relationship with God questioned to her face. She told a reporter how much that hurt, to know what she had lived and to have it doubted in the room built to praise it.
The control case exposes the experiment. A hero system organized around martyrdom does not want a believer. It wants a martyr, and a martyr requires a corpse. The yes that lives is anticlimactic, a witness with no wound to authenticate it, a testimony the story cannot spend because the teller is standing right there, ordinary and alive and inconvenient. The columnist Eric Zorn predicted that history would favor the Bernall myth over the Schnurr facts, and he had the direction right even if he might be wrong about the duration. The myth does not survive because people are fools. It survives because a community under the two terrors needs a door it can walk through, and a dead girl who said yes is a door, while a living girl who said yes is a hallway that leads back to the bare event.
Three coordinates, then, for anyone standing where these worlds meet.
The first. The argument over the yes was never an argument about what happened in the library. It was an argument over which hero system gets to own the dead, and the loudest claims of fidelity to fact, on every side, were claims about whose immortality project the deaths would serve. The reporter chasing the correction and the pastor chasing the convert were both bidding to make the death mean something that would outlast them. Honesty about Columbine starts with noticing that one’s own hunger for the story to come out a certain way is the same hunger, only better dressed.
The second. The strongest test of any account here is the one that asks what it does for the living rather than what it proves about the dead. The parent’s yes keeps a mother upright. The reporter’s no keeps a record clean. The scientist’s account keeps a brother from hating himself for an honest mistake. Each does real work, and the work each does explains why its holders will not give it up for a contrary fact. A man who wants to move someone off a belief has to offer a wall that holds up the same weight, not just knock the old wall down.
The third, and the one the whole essay turns on. Watch what a culture does with the witness who survives. The girl on the lawn and the girl at the table became torches, and a pastor stood at a funeral and asked the living to pick the torch up. The girl on the carpet, who said the words and kept her pulse, became a problem. A hero system shows its true appetite not in how it honors its dead but in how it treats the survivor who carries the same testimony in a living body. Valeen Schnurr said yes, and the only thing the story could not forgive her for was living to say it again.
