It was too late. The ball did not
stop an inch from his face, but smashed into it. He was knocked backward, the
back of his head hitting the bricks and his body hitting the ladder. The ladder
went down with him on top of it. The ball continued to swing back and forth.
Many in the class screamed. A
young man seated in the third row on the aisle watched in shock for less than a
second. Then he quickly stood up, dashed to the front of the room, and out the
side door where the bowling ball swung. A little over a second later everybody
heard a cry for help from outside the lecture room.
Amy had been standing on one side
of the room looking at the audience and smiling, as she had been instructed to
do when she was not actively assisting with a demonstration. When she heard the
sound of the bowling ball hitting Matsen, she turned
and watched him as he went down and lay motionless. The bowling ball was still
swinging.
Amy ran to the path of the
bowling ball, caught it when it was motionless, and walked it to its equilibrium
position. Then she ran to Matsen’s side and put her
ear to his chest. She tried to breathe into his mouth and start him breathing,
but after several minutes she gave up. She stood up again and buried her face
in her hands. Some students crowded around Matsen,
but most sat riveted to their seats. Several walked out of the lecture room.
Amy did not stand over Matsen for long. After a few seconds she shouted to the
class, “I think he’s dead. Everybody stay in your seats. Call an ambulance.
Call the police. But don’t all of you call at the same time. I’ll be right
back.”
Without waiting for some of the
students to call 911 on their cell phones, Amy rushed out of the lecture room
to the main office. Instead of asking
the secretary for permission to see the department chair, she burst into his
office without knocking. He was at a meeting with four other faculty members.
He looked at Amy severely, although he could not help admiring her in her
T-shirt and shorts.
“What is your name?” he asked,
disapprovingly.
“Amy Burton.”
“We are in the middle of an
important conference. What is the meaning of this interruption?”
Sobbing, she blurted out,
“There’s been a terrible accident.
Professor Matsen
has been killed by a bowling ball in the big lecture room.”
She ran back to the lecture room,
the faculty members following her. The department chair ordered the students
around Matsen to go back to their seats. The five men
looked at him for a few seconds. Then the department chair, whose name was John
Ashbury, knealt down and
felt Matsen’s pulse. There wasn’t any. He listened for breathing and a heartbeat,
but heard nothing.
Ashbury
got to his feet and asked Amy, “What happened?”
Amy told him that she was an
assistant in the course. Then she said, “Professor Matsen
was illustrating conservation of energy with a bowling ball, just as he did in
his eight-o’clock class. The ball is
supposed to swing up to his face but no farther. For some reason, in this class
the ball struck him.”
“Did you see it happen?”
Amy shook her head. “Sorry, but I
was facing the students instead of watching Professor Matsen.
I heard the ball hit him and ran to him. I tried to revive him but couldn’t.”
Ashbury
faced the students, some of whom were crying. He said, “I’m afraid Profsessor Matsen is dead. I know
this is a terrible shock to all of you, but I have to ask you some
questions. Did Professor Matsen accidently push the
bowling ball away from him?”
The students started to reply all
at once, but Ashbury said, “If you have something to
say, please raise your hand.” Many hands
went up, and the students who were called on
said
that Professor Matsen just let the ball go from rest.
Then Ashbury
asked, “Did Professor Matsen faint or stumble forward
as the ball approached him?”
Again, many hands went up. The
students were sure that Matsen was motionless with
the back of his head against the bricks and his eyes closed.
Amy gasped. “My God!” she cried
out in a voice loud enough for everyone in the room to hear. “Then it was not
an accident. Somebody in the storeroom
beyond the side door gave the ball a push. Professor Matsen
was murdered.”