Trust Fall

Trust Fall, a Professor Molly mystery short

Chapter One

A hard nudge in the ribs jolted me awake.

“Molly,” Emma hissed. “C’mon, stand up.”

I had dozed off in one of the comfortable new chairs in Administrative Complex Conference Room 5B, my head resting on the shoulder of my best friend and fellow sufferer, Emma Leilani Kano’opomaika’i Nakamura.

“What?” I rubbed my eyes.

“Are you sleeping?”

“Well I was. Why do we have to stand up?”

“We’re doing the trust fall thing now. Eh, don’t let Jake see you making that face or he’s gonna give us another lecture about our attitude.”

“What? I’m not making a face. This is my face.”

Jake Ahu, Director of Faculty Development, glared around the room, and tightened his grip on his clipboard.

“This is a trust fall, people. Come on, everyone out of your seats. We are cultivating a culture of trust here on our campus.”

Jake’s unenviable task was to wrangle us through a full workday of “team building”: making orange, gold, green, and blue hats out of construction paper, building towers with marshmallows and dry spaghetti, and falling backwards off of chairs. Jake was maybe in his late thirties, but looked prematurely haggard. His black hair was shot through with gray, and his bright aloha shirt fit a little too loosely around the neck.

“Fine,” he said. “If no one’s going to come forward, we’ll do it by department.”

At least he wasn’t insufferably chipper. I’ll give him that.

Jake tapped his clipboard with his pen.

“Anthropology? Anthropology isn’t here. Art, also not here. Biology, Emma Nakamura, there you are. You’re going first. Come on. Everyone. Up to the front of the room. Molly Barda, College of Commerce, you’re next after Emma. Kyle Stockhausen, Digital Humanities, you’re after Molly.”

I’m Molly. Molly Barda, Ph.D. I earned my doctorate at one of the top ten literature and creative writing programs in the country, and this is not where I expected to end up. By “this,” I mean an eight-hour team-building retreat in the Administrative Complex at remote Mahina State University, in Mahina, Hawaii where, according to our radio spots, “Your Future Begins Tomorrow.” In the entire history of business and enterprise, has there been any practice less humane, less conducive to employee solidarity, and more likely to tip the garden-variety introvert into full-blown misanthropy, than the team-building retreat?

“I’m in the management department,” I said to Jake. “That starts with an M.”

“Well I’m still after you,” said the chair of the philosophy department.

“You’re both in front of me,” said a man behind me. I turned to see Scott Nixon, Kyle Stockhausen’s main competitor for the title of Hipster Humanities Heartthrob. Unlike the earnest Stockhausen, Nixon affected an air of bemused detachment (which the undergraduates in his Jane Austen elective reportedly found irresistible). Stockhausen was blond, and wore whimsical t-shirts to display his indifference to status; Nixon had dark hair, and bolstered his bad-boy persona by wearing a black leather jacket, which must have been torture in Mahina’s sultry climate. Both men sported black-framed glasses and a fashionable sprinkling of stubble.

“Scott,” I said, “in what alphabet does English come after management and philosophy?”

“I teach writing.

“Hey,” someone said. “What about ag? Where’s the person from ag?”

“He’s coming in later,” Jake said. “They have to testify at the GMO hearings.”

I eyed the exit door, wondering whether I could slip out unseen and get to grading the stack of papers waiting for me back in my office. Getting my students’ assignments returned seemed like a better use of my time than standing on chairs.

All of the conference rooms in the new Administrative Complex had back exit doors. They allowed escape in case a mad gunman burst into the room. The classrooms didn’t have this safeguard. In fact, the new administration building boasted several features our classrooms lacked, like recessed lighting, polished marble floors, and functional air conditioning.

“I’ll go first.”

Kyle Stockhausen, assistant professor of digital humanities, strode up to the Trust Fall Chair. The Trust Fall Chair wasn’t one of the red, gold, or green conference room chairs (the new school colors, as decided by student referendum). Those chairs all had wheels, and anyway, I’m sure the administration didn’t want us stepping all over the seat cushions with our dirty shoes. No, the Trust Fall Chair was plain, straight-backed, and made of wood. It had probably been ordered online and shipped from the mainland, just for this event.

“Thank you for volunteering, Professor Stockhausen,” Jake nodded at him.

“Please. Call me Kaila.”

I heard Emma snort. Emma, who grew up just a few miles down the road from Mahina State University, had definite opinions about “white people who move here from Nebraska and give themselves Hawaiian names.”

Mahalo nui loa, brother,” said Kyle/Kaila Stockhausen as Jake helped him up onto the wooden seat. He slowly stood, his spiky blonde hair almost brushing the ceiling.

“Come on, everyone move in closer.” Jake motioned us forward. “You’re all going to have to come together to catch him when he falls. Kyle, sorry, Kaila, turn around and put your arms out.”

He did, displaying the black courier lettering on the back of his pale yellow t-shirt: Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid. –Albert Einstein

“Einstein never said that,” Emma muttered.

“Now the rest of you, move in. Closer, you have to be right underneath so you can catch him.”

“I have to apologize for my colleagues,” Stockhausen said over his shoulder. “They don’t yet realize what a privilege this is. I appreciate the value of these high-touch team-building activities. In fact, I use many of these exercises in my own classes.”

This was the limit for Emma.

“Give it a rest, Stockholm-syndrome,” she shouted. “You teach all your classes online.”

Before anyone could react to Emma’s outburst, the exit door at the far end of the room flew open. Everyone turned toward the welcome distraction. A man wearing shorts and a t-shirt stood silhouetted in the doorway.

“Am I late?” the newcomer asked.

“Here’s our ag person,” Jake said. “Come in, come in. You’re just in time for the—”

Jake’s sentence was cut short by the scrape of wood on marble, and an ugly thud. We all pushed forward to get a look.

Kyle Stockhausen lay face up on the polished marble floor, blood spreading behind his head like a crimson halo.